Arveum Capital PartnersCapital Partners

Energy Newsletter

12. Mai 2026 · 06:36 Uhr

1

Energy Crisis 2026: Gas Price Shock Threatens German Economy

CNBC, CNN Business, ECB

Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East have caused energy price shocks, reducing Germany's 2026 growth forecast from 1% to 0.5%. Electricity prices in Germany exceed €120-150/MWh, while the tight coupling of gas and electricity prices exacerbates market volatility. The energy crisis threatens industry, households, and inflationary stability.

CRITICALZum Artikel
2

Grid Expansion Stalls: Maturity Assessment Procedure & Network Development Plan Delay Energy Transition

pv-magazine, 50komma2, Gleiss Lutz

The four transmission system operators (50Hertz, Amprion, TenneT, TransnetBW) launch a new maturity assessment procedure starting April 2026 to evaluate grid connections, but only gradually replace old first-come-first-served principles. The announced Network Development Plan (autumn 2026) is being awaited by grid operators, blocking HVDC expansion projects. Battery storage and renewable projects remain stuck without sufficient grid capacity.

CRITICALZum Artikel
3

Offshore Wind Power: Logistics and Skilled Labor Shortage Slow Expansion

Die Welt, GreentechLead

Companies like EnBW, Vattenfall, RWE, and Ørsted compete for limited port capacities, specialized vessels, and skilled workers for offshore projects. Technology is a secondary concern – logistics is the decisive factor for economic viability and schedule planning. The bottleneck jeopardizes Germany's wind power expansion targets for 2026-2027.

4

Gas Power Plant Lobbying: EnBW & RWE Dominate Energy Storage Auctions

manager magazin, Cleanthinking

Spiegel investigation reveals: The Economic Ministry under Katherina Reiche allowed EnBW and RWE to submit proposals that systematically favor gas power plants over battery storage in the auction system. EnBW CEO acknowledges gas lobbying failure. This contradicts energy transition goals and favors fossil backup capacity.

5

Solar Expansion Reaches 100 GW, but Price Volatility Destabilizes Markets

Wikipedia, EIKE, Euronews

Germany reaches 100 GW of installed solar capacity (2026), causing extreme price swings and for the first time negative electricity prices on holidays. Rampant PV expansion without corresponding storage and grid infrastructure leads to oversupply scenarios. Missing market mechanisms and storage capacities make the power system volatile and economically fragile.

Lagebild

Germany's energy transition faces a critical confrontation in 2026 between technological goals and systemic constraints. A geopolitically triggered energy crisis (Middle East conflict) collides with structural grid expansion deficits, logistics bottlenecks for renewable technologies, and political lobbying conflicts favoring fossil backup capacity. While solar and wind expansion nominally progress (100 GW solar, 73 GW wind), critical infrastructure (storage, HVDC lines) and market mechanisms to stabilize volatility are missing – with direct impact on electricity prices (€120-150/MWh) and economic growth (forecast: 0.5% instead of 1%). The system risks oscillating between overproduction and shortage, while institutional delays (Network Development Plan autumn 2026) destabilize investment cycles.

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