⚡Energy Newsletter
May 13, 2026 · 06:36 Uhr
1Energy price shock endangers Germany's economic recovery
r/europe (82pts), CNBC, German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs Rising energy prices due to geopolitical tensions in Iran force Germany to halve its 2026 growth forecast from 1% to 0.5%. Industrial production lags 24% below trend, while wholesale electricity prices remain at ~€88-100/MWh. Lack of energy supply diversification (nuclear phase-out, Russian gas gone, limited storage capacity) acts as a structural vulnerability.
2Europe's electricity prices remain gas-dependent – geopolitical risk
@janrosenow (75pts), @marcosagusstinn (71pts), IEEFA, ECB Europe's electricity prices are structurally coupled to gas prices; countries with high gas share pay 2-3x more for industrial electricity (EU €0.19-0.20/kWh vs. USA €0.07-0.08/kWh). Germany with gas prices near prior-year levels and electricity prices above €100/MWh loses competitiveness. Only massive renewables expansion and intelligent storage could break this structural dependency.
3Grid expansion and storage innovations launched in live operations
IQIP/EnBW/Vattenfall, Übertragungsnetzbetreiber, Gleiss Lutz EnBW and Vattenfall launch first full-scale tests of the EQ-Piling method for offshore wind power at the Dreekant facility; starting April 1, 2026, all four TSOs (50Hertz, Amprion, TenneT, TransnetBW) implement a new maturity assessment process for the first time. Philippsburg battery project at EnBW with construction beginning summer 2026, commissioning end of 2027 aims to increase flexibility. These projects directly address integration challenges of volatile energy sources.
4EnBW and RWE in lobbying scandal; gas power plants favored
Manager Magazin, CleanThinking, SPIEGEL-Recherche SPIEGEL investigation shows: Economic Ministry ordered proposals from EnBW and RWE that systematically favor gas power plants over battery storage in auctions. EnBW CEO acknowledges shortcoming in gas lobbying for Minister Reiche. This undermines credible energy transition and favors inflexible, increasingly expensive backup technology instead of modular storage.
5Renewables break 100-GW solar threshold; price volatility persists
@Schuldensuehner (72pts), ADAC, Handelsblatt, EIKE Germany reaches over 100 GW installed solar capacity and 73 GW wind in early 2026; Q1 2026 renewable production rises to 73.2 GWh. Nevertheless, extreme price swings persist (partially negative prices during oversupply), while households pay €0.10/kWh. Starting June 2026, §42c EnWG permits energy communities for local energy transition for the first time.
Situation Report
Germany and Europe are experiencing a new energy crisis in 2026: geopolitical tensions (Iran conflict) drive oil and gas prices, causing Germany to remain structurally dependent on gas prices despite 100+ GW of renewable capacity, while industrial production falls 24% below trend. Large corporations (E.ON, RWE, EnBW) successfully lobby for more expensive gas power plants instead of storage, endangering long-term flexibility and cementing electricity prices at €88-100/MWh. Technological advances (offshore piling, battery storage, decentralized grid management from June) could help medium-term, but lacking political consistency and lobbying delay transformation—vulnerability to energy shocks remains acute.
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