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Unlike the 2022 energy crisis where coal stocks were low, current high inventories (7-8 times higher in China) provide a readily available and cheaper substitute for natural gas. This high substitutability is capping gas price increases despite major supply disruptions from the Middle East.
Global natural gas markets are currently disconnected. Extreme cold in Europe is driving prices up nearly 30% and draining historically low storage. Simultaneously, moderate weather in the U.S. and warmer conditions in Asia are keeping prices there subdued, showcasing how localized weather can override global supply trends.
Contrary to common assumptions, China's future natural gas demand growth will be led by the industrial sector, not power generation. Policy support for manufacturing and lower global LNG prices are expected to drive significant coal-to-gas switching in industrial processes, while gas in the power sector remains a secondary source to balance renewables.
An energy crisis has two key factors: the size of the disruption and its length. Market buffers like strategic reserves can cushion the initial shock, but a prolonged crisis exhausts these buffers and leads to extreme price increases, which haven't happened yet.
Europe's power system has significant flexibility (over 10 BCM) to substitute gas with coal. However, this switch is not automatic; it requires a commercial incentive. Gas prices need to reach the €50-60/MWh range to make coal the more profitable option for power generation, thereby curbing gas demand.
As a direct response to soaring natural gas prices, countries may pivot back to coal for energy security. The IEA anticipates an uptick in coal use, not just in China and India, but potentially in the US and Europe, as a pragmatic, if environmentally damaging, short-term solution.
China has stockpiled approximately three to four months' worth of crude oil. This strategic reserve, combined with its ability to shift from natural gas to coal, gives it significant versatility and reduces its vulnerability to supply disruptions from conflicts in the Straits of Hormuz.
Drawing parallels to the 1970s oil shocks which spurred nuclear power and fuel efficiency, the IEA head predicts the current crisis will not only boost renewables but also drive a strong comeback for nuclear and, counterintuitively, a resurgence of coal in Asia due to high gas prices.
China is insulated from the worst effects of an oil shock due to its state-controlled supply chain. It can activate coal gasification facilities when crude prices exceed $100 and toggle its power grid between gas, surplus coal, and solar, minimizing the impact on economic growth.
The 2022 crisis was severe because oil, natural gas, coal, and electricity prices all soared simultaneously. In this crisis, only oil has seen a dramatic increase, while electricity and coal remain stable. This divergence is why central banks are more at ease.
Despite international gas prices soaring 60% due to conflict, US Henry Hub prices remain flat. This is because the global coal market is healthier than during the 2022 energy shock, weakening the transmission channel that previously linked the two gas benchmarks through coal-to-gas switching.