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EU prices killing competitiveness – industry leaders

HomeUpdatesEU prices killing competitiveness – industry leaders

Energy and carbon costs must go down “today,” over 1,300 executives have told Brussels

More than 1,300 European industry organizations have urged Brussels to lower energy prices and carbon costs to save the bloc’s competitiveness.

The plea came on Wednesday as Belgium hosts two days of high-level talks dedicated to industrial revival.

“Bring energy and carbon costs down. The costs of energy in Europe are simply too high to compete and are not only driven by commodity prices but also by regulatory charges,” reads the declaration.

Multiple media outlets have quoted industry executives calling for electricity prices to return to pre-2021 levels of €44 ($52) per MWh from the current €80-100 range.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told the European Industry Summit on Wednesday that the bloc was “well-positioned to lower costs,” citing planned improvements to the electric grid and expansion of offshore wind power projects.

The industry argues, however, that revamping the grid will take time, with the declaration urging the change “today.”

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“The chemical industry does not have 10 years left,” Peter Huntsman, CEO of chemicals producer Huntsman, told Politico.

European energy prices have spiked since the EU introduced sanctions on major supplier Russia over the Ukraine conflict. Brussels has pursued a strategy of weaning itself off Russian energy through replacing cheaper pipeline gas with more expensive US LNG and accelerating a shift to renewable energy.

Russian presidential envoy Kirill Dmitriev has argued that “Europe will lose the competitiveness battle and will never catch up with the world without Russia.”

Carbon pricing is central to the competitiveness battle. EU industry executives point out that carbon costs elsewhere are far lower than within the bloc. The EU Emissions Trading System currently charges the industry approximately €80 per tonne of carbon, compared to China’s ETS at around €9 per tonne and South Korea’s at €7 per tonne.


READ MORE: Russian energy cut key to EU economic woes – Macron

Since 2023, more than 20 major chemical plants have closed across Europe, affecting 30,000 jobs, according to trade union IndustriALL. Chemical investments in the bloc collapsed by more than 80% in 2025, industry data shows. German chemical giant BASF, meanwhile, has made its largest-ever investment in China. Its €8.7 billion plant began partial production in December.

February 13, 2026 at 02:34AM
RT

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