Bibliography
- https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/special-reports/29042026/wood-mackenzie-the-global-lng-market-faces-disruption-of-80-mtpa-of-gulf-supply-yet-power-prices-in-europe-held-stable-at-90mwh
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Wood Mackenzie Energy Scenarios 2026
Wood Mackenzie Crude Export Collapse 60Pct 2026
Key Finding: 80 mtpa Gulf LNG Disruption — Scale Comparable to Russia 2022
"The Middle East conflict disrupted 80 million tpy of Gulf LNG exports" — a supply shock that matched the scale of Russia's 2022 curtailment into Europe.
Yet unlike 2022, European power markets absorbed the shock without severe price spikes. The reason: structural changes in European power generation since 2022.
European Power Prices: Stabilized at €90/MWh
Central finding:
| Metric | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| European 5 major markets power price | €90/MWh average, March 2026 | Unchanged vs. March 2025 |
| Comparison to Ukraine crisis | Well below €280/MWh (early 2022) | ~1/3 of the 2022 spike |
| Month-ahead gas price peak | $19/MMbtu in April 2026 | vs. ~$70/MMbtu in September 2022 |
| Gas price in May 2026 | $15/MMbtu | Only 20% above 2025 average |
Country-level variation (March 2026 vs. March 2025):
| Country | Price Change |
|---|---|
| Spain | -22% |
| France | -16% |
| Germany | +5% |
| UK | +3% |
| Italy | +18% |
Spain had the lowest wholesale power price at €42/MWh in March 2026, supported by renewables penetration exceeding 60%.
Why Europe Absorbed the Shock: Three Factors
Wood Mackenzie identifies three factors that contained prices:
Factor 1: Warm Weather → High Storage Levels
"warmer weather left European storage at 28% capacity at end-March" — above typical minimum safe levels, providing buffer
Factor 2: New LNG Supply Additions
"project start-ups added 40 million tpy of new LNG supply (on an annualised basis) since the beginning of 2026" — new capacity offsetting lost Gulf supply
Factor 3: China's LNG Demand Plummeted
China turned to alternatives (coal, domestic gas) reducing its competition for seaborne LNG, freeing up supply for Europe.
Europe's Generation Mix Transformation Since 2022
The structural shift that protected Europe:
| Metric | Early 2022 | March 2026 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gas-fired generation share | ~10% | <5% | Halved |
| Renewables + battery price-setting | ~2% (Australia only) | Widespread | Structural |
| Europe's annual gas generation | Baseline | -13% since early 2022 | Major shift |
| France nuclear share | ~5% of supply | 10% | Doubled |
| Germany's coal + gas share | 46% (Feb 2026) | 39% (Mar 2026) | Declining |
| Netherlands coal + gas | 49% | 36% | Declining |
"The Ukraine war illustrated for Europe the benefits of diversifying away from volatile fossil fuels. Battery storage and renewables set prices with increasing frequency, reducing the influence of gas. That structural shift insulated power markets when this crisis hit." — Peter Osbaldstone, Research Director, Europe Power, Wood Mackenzie
Australia as the Template
Australia's battery storage growth is the leading indicator of the global pattern:
"Battery storage in Australia increased its share of price-setting from approximately 2% in early 2022 to 20% by late 2025, while gas-fired generation halved from 10% to under 5%."
This demonstrates the "battery storage reduces gas price-setting influence" dynamic in a market that had no structural energy crisis in 2022-2026 — the transformation happened organically.
Japan's Nuclear Comeback
Japan's nuclear contribution doubled:
"Japan's nuclear plants now constitute 10% of supply, double the 2022 level" — reflecting post-Fukushima restart progress and energy security prioritization.
Key Insights for Research Questions
Q1 (Supply Destruction): SUPPORTING EVIDENCE
- 80 mtpa Gulf LNG disruption confirmed — equivalent to Russia's 2022 Europe cut
- Alternative export routes (Yanbu, Fujairah, ITP pipeline) partially offset
- 40 mtpa new LNG start-ups partially compensated
Q2 (Price Impact): RELEVANT — Nuance on Europe
- LNG/gas prices peaked at $19/MMbtu (April), eased to $15/MMbtu (May) — 20% above average
- Not comparable to 2022 ($70/MMbtu peak) — structural change absorbed shock
- However: Italy +18%, Germany +5% — some countries still exposed
Q3 (Europe Impact): PRIMARY EVIDENCE — Most Important
- Direct documentation: Europe power prices stable at €90/MWh despite 80 mtpa LNG disruption
- This is the clearest evidence in the KB that Europe's structural energy transition (post-Ukraine) has materially reduced its vulnerability to Gulf supply shocks
- However: Diesel market remains acutely exposed (separate Wood Mackenzie analysis) — electricity stability does not translate to liquid fuels stability
- Contrast: Gas/electricity markets absorbed shock; diesel markets did not
Critical Assessment
Wood Mackenzie's analysis provides critical nuance for Q3 (Europe):
What Europe weathered well:
- Electricity/gas power markets — structural transformation protected them
- 80 mtpa LNG disruption comparable to Russia's 2022 cut, but price impact ~1/3 as severe
What Europe remains exposed to:
- Diesel/liquid fuels — structural deficit persists (€2.00+/liter, -76.7% Baltic exports)
- Middle distillates for transport and industry
- The power/gas resilience and the fuels vulnerability coexist — they are different markets
This splits Europe's exposure into two distinct problems: the energy transition success story (gas/electricity) and the geopolitical vulnerability story (diesel/middle distillates). Wood Mackenzie documents both simultaneously.
Q3 Europe Impact · Wood Mackenzie Crude Export Collapse 60Pct 2026 · Wood Mackenzie Energy Scenarios 2026