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PARIS: Soaring European wholesale gas prices are encouraging more utilities to switch to carbon-heavy coal to generate electricity just as the region tries to wean nations off the polluting fuel.

Although European coal and carbon prices have also jumped in recent months, they have lagged the spike in gas prices, causing short-term marginal costs to shift in favour of using coal to generate electricity.

Benchmark carbon permit prices under the European Union's Emissions Trading System (ETS) have almost doubled since the start of the year while European coal futures are more than twice as high. Wholesale Dutch gas prices, however, are almost four times higher than at the start of 2021.

Ahead of the next round of United Nations climate talks in Scotland in November, the EU has been encouraging other big polluters to commit to more ambitious climate targets and move away from coal-fired power.

The EU's ETS, the main tool for curbing greenhouse gas emissions, charges power plants and factories for each tonne of carbon dioxide they emit. Gas-fired power plants had been cheaper to operate than their coal-burning equivalents for more than two years due to the added cost of carbon emissions, but that changed in around July this year. "While European coal generation was handcuffed by record carbon prices in the early parts of the summer, soaring TTF (Dutch gas) prices have now unlocked the gas-to-coal switching lever," said analysts at Bank of America. High gas prices have also prompted a switch to oil in Britain, where coal accounts for just 2% of the power mix, with the country facing tight electricity supplies this winter. In Germany, July's reversal in the difference between the "clean dark" and "clean spark" year-ahead spreads - which measure the value of operating coal-fired and gas-fired plants after accounting for carbon emissions - prompted greater use of brown coal, or lignite, a traditionally cheaper fuel source which was being driven out of the market by rising carbon permit prices.

"The electricity transition is happening but not with the urgency required: emissions are going in the wrong direction," said climate thinktank Ember's global lead Dave Jones.

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