⚡Energy Newsletter
14. März 2026 · 07:33 Uhr
1Gas Price Crisis in Germany: 6x More Expensive Than in USA
r/EconomyCharts, @Schuldensuehner, NYT Spot gas prices in Germany have risen above €60/MWh – approximately 6x higher than in the USA. The crisis is exacerbated by geopolitics (Iran conflict, Suez bottlenecks) and low gas storage levels. German industry warns of existential burdens from energy costs.
2Energy Transition Under Pressure: Network Package Leak Sparks Controversy
@42tw1tter1sd3ad, @Kl_Stone, Web-Suche Leaked drafts of network package reform reveal influence of EON on German energy policy; 75% of network bottlenecks are attributed to the company. Criticism from the Greens and renewable energy associations grows, while hundreds of companies fear a slowdown in the energy transition.
3Power Grid Expansion Accelerates: TSOs Reform Connection Procedures
@ZfK_de, @zeitung_energie, Amprion/TenneT The four transmission system operators (50Hertz, Amprion, TenneT, TransnetBW) are introducing maturity level procedures and plan to manage grid connections regionally rather than chronologically in the future. TenneT invests €10 billion annually; 50Hertz calls for clear political priorities for renewable energy connections.
4Germany Exceeds Electricity Production: 84.8 vs. 81.8 TWh in 2026
@ChristophBeisl1, @Kl_Stone, Zeit/Energiemonitor German electricity production exceeds consumption for the first time significantly; 75% of the electricity mix comes from renewable sources, export share rises. However, electricity prices remain structurally high; McKinsey warns of system costs and necessary storage and flexibility investments.
5RWE and Vattenfall: Nuclear and Fusion Power as Solution Strategy
@FocusedEnergy_1, @apollo_news_de, Web-Suche RWE supports fusion power startup Focused Energy; Vattenfall CEO examines small modular reactor construction. This combination of large renewable projects (hybrid wind-solar) and nuclear energy investments signals industry strategy to secure baseload and grid stability.
Lagebild
Germany faces massive pressure in 2026 between energy transition success and price crisis: While electricity production sets renewable records (75% renewable share), network capacity and storage for volatility are lacking, while gas prices explode driven by geopolitics. Network package reform becomes a conflict between major energy companies (EON, RWE) and energy transition goals, while transmission system operators invest massively. Return to nuclear energy and fusion power investments indicate a strategic shift, yet high electricity prices and supply uncertainty (especially for gas) remain acute economic risks for industry and competitiveness.
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