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Dublin: 12 °C Saturday 25 May, 2013

Energy Index jumps in July with increases for oil, coal and electricity

The latest Bord Gáis Energy Index cites supply issues and eurozone weakness as pushing fuel up.

Image: Lewis Stickley/PA Archive

THE BORD GÁIS Energy Index has seen its largest monthly increase since February due to rising oil prices and ongoing concerns about the weakness of the euro currency.

The Index rose 8 per cent in July to 144 – an increase of 4 per cent on July 2011.

Tensions between the US, Europe and Iran increased last month, heightening the possibility of Iran forcing the closure of the vital Straits of Hormuz oil transportation route. There is also increasing concern that conflict in Syria could destabilise the region – and oil supplies. Rising oil prices pushed that part of the Index up 10 per cent to 157 in July.

Bord Gáis also reports that the euro’s poor performance in July affected the commodity markets by impacting negatively on eurozone buyers.

The natural gas part of the Index rose 4 per cent to 201 in July, reflecting Ireland’s reliance on the British wholesale gas market and the euro’s weakness against the British Pound, which made Irish purchases of British gas more expensive.

Meanwhile, a Norwegian industrial dispute over oil workers’ pensions aroused concerns of a lockout and the potential suspension of Norway’s offshore oil and gas output. Norway supplies one-fifth of all gas deliveries to Europe.

Gas prices also impacted on the electricity part of the Index rising 2 per cent to 113 – because most of the power produced in Ireland is generated by burning gas.

A rail strike in Colombia is cited in the Index as the main reason coal rose 12 per cent to 131 last month; Ireland imports most of its coal from Colombia.

“As an importer of fuels, Ireland remains very exposed to market shocks and price movements,” John Heffernan, power trader at Bord Gáis Energy, says. “With the ongoing weakness of the euro, any potential future oil or gas price falls may not be fully realised by euro zone countries and any rises could be amplified.”

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Comments (7 Comments)

  • When are the government going to get off their asses and develop and implement a country wide sustainable energy program . We have billions of kilo joules of energy wasted every minute that the wind and waves are left unharnessed. If Ireland not only did not have to import energy but were also in a position to export energy through this new interconnected grid system that eirgrid have built or are building we would be one of the richest countries in Europe if not the world , no emigration , no houses repossessed , no families split up for money reasons , no suicides , better schools and healthcare etc. etc.
    Is it really a no brainier or am I missing something?

    Reply
    • Mjhint 07/08/12 #

      Wind electricity is more expensive than other type of electricity. Wave energy is still not viable. We dont have the resources to drill for oil so its unlikely we will have for renewables.

      Reply
    • The only energy source that is pulling down wholesale energy prices is wind energy – Google IWEA Redpoint Study for the facts. New wind energy projects are getting paid 6.8c per kW the question is why are we paying about 10c more at the domestic meter? Most wind projects will wait 8 – 12 years for the connection to the grid. Fossil energy prices will rocket at the first signs of an international economic recovery, unless Ireland can provide a hedge against this by developing wind and other renewables we will not have a sustainable economic recovery.

      Reply
    • Tom Peters (Business analyst, author of ‘In search of excellence’) has pointed out that corporate structures in the 21st century will be very different from the last. Large globalised corporations will give way to smaller more dynamic and versatile organisations.
      These observations have gone unheeded in the area of banking and energy, which have become so uncompetitive they are now liabilities for western economies.
      Change will only come slowly and extremely painfully while vested interests continue to dominate the agenda.
      Greenpeace have picked up a similar theme in the energy sector.

      ” Greenpeace UK, to be precise. The organization has just released a massive (~75 page) report entitled Decentralising Power: An Energy Revolution For The 21st Century, looking at what it would take to move the UK aggressively towards a distributed power network. The capsule argument, from the report, touches on arguments familiar to WorldChanging readers:

      In a decentralised energy (DE) system, electricity would be generated close to or at the point of use. Buildings, instead of being passive consumers of energy, would become power stations, constituent parts of local energy networks. They would have solar photovoltaic panels, solar water heaters, micro wind turbines, heat pumps for extracting energy from the earth. They might also be linked to commercial or domestic operated combined heat and power systems. The massive expansion in renewable capacity that this would represent, and the fact that when fossil fuels were burnt the heat would be captured and used, would lead to dramatic reductions in overall carbon emissions – at least half of all emissions from the power sector, or 15% of total UK emissions.”

      Reply
  • i reckon most of the good onshore wind sites that are left will never get the go ahead. to many people will object…the offshore wind option is better…less planning constraints and they can build enormous turbines.(just need about 10 more interconnecters to uk to bring energy to the market)
    think wave/tidal power will be brilliant but is 20 years behind wind in development
    Im working on a 1.6,mw anaerobic digestion power plant in tuam that has has been granted planning permission but surprise surprise some locals are gonna object to an bord pleabala…people need to be educated about renewables…its the only show in town to create jobs!!

    Reply
  • “The latest Bord Gáis Energy Index cites supply issues and eurozone weakness as pushing fuel up….”

    ….. in the same way the Euro strength pushed the gas prices down when Euro was 1.5 to USD.

    Bollox.

    Reply

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