December 19, 2025
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Oil and refined products as a silent regulator

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Oil rarely features in discussions about electricity market stability. It is often treated as a parallel energy universe, relevant to transport fuels, geopolitics, and global benchmarks, but largely disconnected from power and gas dynamics. This perception is misleading. In an integrated energy system, oil and refined products act as a silent regulator, shaping costs, flows, and risk premia across gas and electricity markets without necessarily appearing in headline price movements.

The influence of oil begins with logistics. Shipping is the circulatory system of global energy, and shipping costs are closely tied to oil prices and refined fuel availability. LNG, which has become a cornerstone of European gas supply, depends on maritime transport. Changes in bunker fuel prices, tanker availability, or insurance costs directly affect LNG netbacks. When shipping becomes more expensive or constrained, gas flows adjust, altering supply conditions in Europe. Power markets then reflect these changes through gas-driven marginal pricing, often without any visible signal from crude benchmarks.

Refining adds another layer of interaction. Refineries are among the largest and most energy-intensive industrial consumers, drawing heavily on gas and electricity. Their operating decisions depend on margins between crude input costs and refined product prices. When oil markets tighten or product spreads widen, refineries run harder, increasing demand for gas and power. Conversely, when margins collapse, refinery throughput falls, reducing energy demand but tightening product supply. These shifts feed back into gas and electricity markets, influencing prices and volatility.

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In South-East Europe, refining plays a particularly important role due to the region’s position along key oil transit routes and its dependence on a limited number of facilities. A refinery outage or maintenance event can alter regional product balances, affecting transport fuel prices and logistics costs. These changes ripple outward, influencing freight rates, industrial activity, and ultimately energy consumption patterns. Oil’s impact thus reaches electricity markets indirectly, through changes in demand and cost structures rather than through direct fuel substitution.

Oil also shapes energy markets through risk perception. Geopolitical events affecting oil-producing regions often trigger broad risk-off behaviour across commodity markets. Even if physical supply is not immediately disrupted, the risk premium embedded in oil prices influences investor sentiment and trading behaviour in gas and power markets. Correlations rise, volatility increases, and forward curves adjust to reflect heightened uncertainty. Oil becomes a proxy for geopolitical risk that permeates the entire energy complex.

Fuel-switching, though limited in modern power systems, remains another channel of influence. In extreme conditions, distillates can serve as backup fuels for power generation or industrial processes. The economics of such switching depend on refined product prices, linking oil market dynamics to emergency power-sector decisions. While these situations are rare, their impact during periods of stress can be significant, reinforcing oil’s role as a system regulator rather than a peripheral market.

The subtlety of oil’s influence makes it easy to overlook. Crude prices may remain stable while refined product markets tighten. Freight rates may spike without moving oil benchmarks materially. Refineries may alter operations based on margins invisible to headline prices. Yet these developments reshape the cost and availability of gas and power, embedding oil-driven signals deep within the energy system.

For South-East Europe, recognising oil’s regulatory role is essential. The region’s exposure to global shipping routes, limited refining capacity, and dependence on imported fuels makes it particularly sensitive to oil-related disruptions. These sensitivities often manifest indirectly, through higher gas costs, altered power prices, or increased volatility, rather than through obvious oil-market shocks.

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