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April 2, 2026 · 06:33 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

In 2026, Germany is facing a critical dual crisis: while the energy transition is showing success in electricity share (53% renewable), gas prices and import dependencies are becoming an existential threat to industry and inflation. Market concentration among E.ON/RWE/EnBW/Vattenfall is reducing competition, while French nuclear power becomes indispensable. In terms of security policy, the war in Iran (price increases) and weak wind energy reveal vulnerabilities – without massive grid investments and storage expansion by 2027, a new supply crisis with geopolitical consequences looms.

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April 1, 2026 · 06:33 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

Germany and Europe are caught in a third energy crisis within 4 years in 2026, with spot gas prices rising to 6 times US levels and inflation rising. The energy transition paradox is intensifying: despite renewables accounting for 45%+ of the mix, electricity prices are set by gas power plants, while industrial electrification (e-vehicles, heat pumps) lags and demand stabilization is missing. The four German transmission system operators must implement massive grid investments, while dependence on French nuclear power plants increases during wind weakness—a geopolitical security risk given European fragmentation. Subsidies and market design fixes combat symptoms, not causes.

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March 31, 2026 · 06:31 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

Germany's energy system is in critical transition crisis: gas prices escalate despite energy transition ambitions, French nuclear power imports become indispensable for grid stability. Electrification is stalling while electricity market mechanisms lack social acceptance. Massive infrastructure challenges (NEP 2037/2045) collide with financing and lobbying conflicts among major utilities (E.ON, RWE, EnBW, Vattenfall). Security policy risk: structural dependence on French nuclear power and international gas price volatility threaten supply security; reform backlog in grid expansion and storage financing exacerbates strategic vulnerability.

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March 30, 2026 · 06:33 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

Germany's energy sector is in a critical phase of upheaval: The Iran war has massively increased oil and gas prices and exacerbates Germany's energy cost competitive disadvantage versus the USA and China. Structural dependencies are becoming increasingly visible—German power grids rely on French nuclear power for stabilization, while accelerated renewable energy expansion (22 GW/year from 2026) does lower electricity prices, but grid expansion and flexibility become critical bottlenecks. Major energy companies such as EnBW and the merged RWE/E.ON structure are under margin pressure; political-regulatory instability (lobby allegations, merger controversies) further complicates long-term planning security. From a security policy perspective, there is considerable risk to energy supply in case of geopolitical shocks as well as growing strategic dependence on French nuclear power.

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March 29, 2026 · 06:33 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

Germany faces a structural energy crisis in 2026: high gas prices due to the Iran conflict exacerbate electricity generation costs, while the overburdened power grid remains unstable despite record renewable shares and causes massive redispatch costs. Major energy companies (RWE, EON, EnBW) capitalize abroad, while Germany's industry suffers from 3x higher electricity prices than the USA and grid expansion lags behind generation capacity. Lobbying allegations and delayed backup power plant tenders signal regulatory failure that undermines the energy transition strategy of decarbonization without secured supply security.

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March 28, 2026 · 07:33 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

Germany faces an energy supply crisis with three critical thrusts: gas prices have exploded due to geopolitics (6x US level) and force a coal renaissance; the power grid runs at capacity limits in 2026 with massive redispatch needs and high import dependency on France; simultaneously, lobbying scandals and antitrust proceedings reveal trust losses in energy corporations. The energy transition loses credibility due to lack of performance (dark doldrums, high import shares) while industry and consumers suffer under record prices – security-wise this deepens Europe's technological and strategic dependency on volatile markets and external actors.

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March 27, 2026 · 07:32 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

Germany is experiencing a confluent energy crisis in 2026: gas prices are exploding due to geopolitical factors to 6x US levels, electricity supply becomes unstable (13 GW imports, grid frequency spikes), while the energy transition shows paradoxical effects (highest EU electricity prices, €29.5 billion subsidies, CO2 reduction stagnates). The major utilities (E.ON, RWE, EnBW) are responding with massive grid expansion and diversification abroad/gas, while the political mistake of nuclear phase-out is now becoming obvious. From a security perspective, this signals structural dependence on external gas sources and critical vulnerability of electricity supply to further geopolitical shocks.

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March 26, 2026 · 07:33 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

Germany faces an energy crisis in 2026 from the simultaneous convergence of grid capacity limits, record-high gas prices, and structural over-subsidization of the energy transition. The power grid is completely saturated while gas dependence for grid stability persists at spot prices above 60 €/MWh – a combination that endangers supply security and causes energy costs to explode for households and industry. Investments by major corporations (E.ON 57 billion €) and subsidies (77.8 billion €) indicate recognized market failures but do not solve structural problems. Geopolitical shocks (Iran conflict) amplify price volatility and make Germany technologically and economically vulnerable to further energy supply disruptions.

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March 25, 2026 · 07:33 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

Germany faces an acute energy crisis: gas prices have risen to six times US levels, the power grid operates at maximum capacity with blackout risks, and nuclear energy shutdown is acknowledged as a strategic mistake even by government officials. In parallel, leaked documents reveal that energy corporations (RWE, E.ON) systematically block affordable storage technologies and perpetuate gas dependency – a conflict of interest exacerbated by personnel overlaps with the Federal Ministry of Economics. The result is a combined crisis of rising electricity prices, deindustrialization risks, and increased dependency on French nuclear power, fundamentally threatening Germany's energy security and economic competitiveness.

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March 24, 2026 · 07:33 Uhr

Energy Newsletter

Germany finds itself in a multiple energy crisis in 2026: While electricity production reaches record renewable levels, the power grid becomes a critical bottleneck due to missing dispatchable capacity. In parallel, the gas price crisis explodes (€60/MWh) through geopolitical shocks (Iran war, Qatar LNG failure), threatening industry and heating and forcing a return to coal. Major energy providers (E.ON, RWE) use their grid infrastructure dominance and lobbying power to protect gas investments and brake green decentralization. The combination of grid instability, geopolitical energy shock, and conflicts of interest among major corporations fundamentally questions Germany's supply security and competitiveness.

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