Zürcher Nachrichten - Sweden sees red over Germany's energy policy

EUR -
AED 3.814762
AFN 73.148861
ALL 98.533992
AMD 410.79214
ANG 1.879063
AOA 953.439951
ARS 1061.449861
AUD 1.665575
AWG 1.86949
AZN 1.758602
BAM 1.960057
BBD 2.105192
BDT 124.59058
BGN 1.959382
BHD 0.391715
BIF 3082.323732
BMD 1.038606
BND 1.41649
BOB 7.204647
BRL 6.413367
BSD 1.042674
BTN 88.715067
BWP 14.361189
BYN 3.41211
BYR 20356.669716
BZD 2.09487
CAD 1.49446
CDF 2980.798062
CHF 0.930488
CLF 0.037326
CLP 1029.933095
CNY 7.580796
CNH 7.586728
COP 4547.472293
CRC 524.343795
CUC 1.038606
CUP 27.523048
CVE 110.50499
CZK 25.131451
DJF 185.665007
DKK 7.458564
DOP 63.408318
DZD 139.772401
EGP 52.888703
ERN 15.579084
ETB 132.586723
FJD 2.408682
FKP 0.822557
GBP 0.830931
GEL 2.918267
GGP 0.822557
GHS 15.326285
GIP 0.822557
GMD 74.779504
GNF 9007.562226
GTQ 8.031442
GYD 218.133733
HKD 8.070729
HNL 26.466734
HRK 7.44982
HTG 136.377492
HUF 413.499561
IDR 16851.687405
ILS 3.793055
IMP 0.822557
INR 88.503374
IQD 1365.866328
IRR 43712.312665
ISK 144.480176
JEP 0.822557
JMD 163.074944
JOD 0.736475
JPY 162.91053
KES 134.240137
KGS 90.358842
KHR 4195.151236
KMF 484.120019
KPW 934.744457
KRW 1504.9343
KWD 0.319859
KYD 0.868887
KZT 546.997946
LAK 22837.707869
LBP 93367.270912
LKR 305.383218
LRD 189.240985
LSL 19.05738
LTL 3.066732
LVL 0.628242
LYD 5.097119
MAD 10.464025
MDL 19.210814
MGA 4889.619059
MKD 61.490336
MMK 3373.350468
MNT 3529.181686
MOP 8.345224
MRU 41.506542
MUR 49.01335
MVR 15.996851
MWK 1807.926375
MXN 21.062158
MYR 4.682013
MZN 66.368584
NAD 19.057288
NGN 1616.527204
NIO 38.373338
NOK 11.871039
NPR 141.945638
NZD 1.842218
OMR 0.39986
PAB 1.042664
PEN 3.892153
PGK 4.226178
PHP 61.17439
PKR 290.163063
PLN 4.254062
PYG 8144.766865
QAR 3.805264
RON 4.975747
RSD 116.939694
RUB 106.409735
RWF 1433.098542
SAR 3.902072
SBD 8.707207
SCR 14.819236
SDG 624.718316
SEK 11.476872
SGD 1.411184
SHP 0.822557
SLE 23.675613
SLL 21779.043227
SOS 595.888387
SRD 36.564626
STD 21497.038937
SVC 9.122813
SYP 2609.527975
SZL 19.051375
THB 35.839205
TJS 11.364681
TMT 3.645506
TND 3.323017
TOP 2.432518
TRY 36.548598
TTD 7.087392
TWD 33.957729
TZS 2497.847511
UAH 43.768154
UGX 3803.259751
USD 1.038606
UYU 46.480945
UZS 13424.153984
VES 53.265868
VND 26432.512462
VUV 123.305337
WST 2.869447
XAF 657.378336
XAG 0.03585
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.806883
XDR 0.795327
XOF 657.391022
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.040884
ZAR 19.070123
ZMK 9348.694722
ZMW 28.854944
ZWL 334.430579
  • RBGPF

    59.7300

    59.73

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.3

    +0.27%

  • SCS

    -0.1400

    12.32

    -1.14%

  • GSK

    -0.2600

    33.43

    -0.78%

  • RIO

    -0.6100

    58.73

    -1.04%

  • NGG

    -0.0900

    57.68

    -0.16%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    36.87

    -0.35%

  • BCC

    -3.6100

    123.01

    -2.93%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    8.38

    -0.36%

  • RELX

    -0.5500

    45.78

    -1.2%

  • CMSC

    -0.2800

    23.84

    -1.17%

  • BP

    -0.1300

    28.41

    -0.46%

  • CMSD

    -0.2000

    23.56

    -0.85%

  • BCE

    -0.2900

    23.11

    -1.25%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    11.95

    -0.67%

  • AZN

    -0.2000

    64.44

    -0.31%

Sweden sees red over Germany's energy policy
Sweden sees red over Germany's energy policy / Photo: THOMAS KIENZLE - AFP/File

Sweden sees red over Germany's energy policy

As one of Europe's biggest suppliers of electricity, Sweden is seeing red over Germany's energy policy, which it says ends up punishing Swedish consumers.

Text size:

Putting diplomatic manners aside, Sweden's energy minister Ebba Busch has not minced words over what she thinks of Berlin's "irresponsible" energy policy.

"I'm furious with the Germans," Busch told a press conference last week.

Germany, then ruled by chancellor Angela Merkel, decided to close its last nuclear power stations in the wake of the Fukushima disaster in 2011 -- a withdrawal completed in the spring of 2023.

Having largely converted to renewable energies, Europe's largest economy is now dependent on the elements and importing energy from abroad.

That includes imports from Sweden, which was Europe's second biggest net exporter of electricity last year -- behind France -- according to energy market website Montel.

- 'Rules of physics' -

But while cross-border grid connections facilitate the balancing of electricity supply and demand across the continent, they also mean that demand in one country can affect prices in another.

The willingness of Germans to dig deep into their pockets to meet their considerable energy needs is therefore also reflected in the electricity bills of Swedish businesses and households.

Sweden has a system with four electricity zones which at times has led to vast price differences between the country's north -- which has vast hydropower facilities -- and the south.

Last week, the price of electricity in the southern regions -- which are more affected by German prices -- was during certain hours when there was a lack of wind on the continent roughly 190 times the price in the north.

Busch on Monday said that "no willpower in the world can override the basic rules of physics, not even Dr Robert Habeck", taking aim at Germany's economy minister and vice chancellor.

"Germany can take whatever decision they want but they need to see it affects their neighbours a lot and it is not fair that Swedes should pay German prices for German decisions," she said on the sidelines of a meeting in Brussels.

Busch and Swedish analysts concede, however, that Germany is not entirely to blame.

Electricity production in southern Sweden was greatly reduced with the closure of several nuclear reactors in recent years.

"Southern Sweden has a great need to increase electricity production," Lotta Medelius-Bredhe, director of the Swedish authority managing electricity transmission Svenska Kraftnat, told Swedish radio this week.

Unlike Berlin, Stockholm has reversed course and decided to build new nuclear power facilities.

- Cable held 'hostage' -

In order to limit the contagion of volatile prices, Sweden wants Germany to follow its example and introduce a system with price zones for electricity.

In the meantime, the Nordic country has said no to the construction of a new 700-MW subsea connection, the Hansa PowerBridge, between the two countries.

"To be clear, we are holding a gigantic cable to Germany hostage, because Germany does not have its energy system in order," Busch told reporters last week.

Berlin is so far ruling out the introduction of variable pricing zones.

"We are in a situation where we produce our electricity from renewable energies mainly in the north and our industry is often in the south," German government spokesman Stefan Hebestreit told AFP.

"We are currently in the process of creating the necessary additional connections, i.e. building the transmission lines. When this is done, the problem will be less significant," he added.

In Norway, Europe's third largest net exporter of electricity last year, there is also a temptation to insulate itself from the continent.

There, the government is advocating not to renew two undersea cables linking the country to Denmark which will reach the end of their life cycle in 2026.

"I have been clear that we will not extend the Skagerrak cables to Denmark if it turns out that they contribute to the high prices we are seeing now... and harm the Norwegian power system," Norway's Energy Minister Terje Aasland told AFP in an email.

Although no formal decision has been taken yet, his announcement has already stoked some tensions between Norway and once again Sweden.

As the neighbouring countries' electricity markets are closely linked, Busch told Norwegian agency NTB that not renewing the Skagerrak 1 and 2 cables would be a "complete catastrophe".

To which Aasland replied, according to NTB: "I must remind Ebba Busch that I am Norway's energy minister."

O.Meier--NZN