Eurogroup president highlights concerns over energy markets amid Iran conflict
Kyriakos Pierrakakis expressed that the EU is being tested by rising oil prices above $100 and the ongoing Iran war affecting energy markets.
Kyriakos Pierrakakis highlighted increasing worries among EU ministers regarding energy market disruptions due to rising oil prices and ongoing conflict in Iran.
Kyriakos Pierrakakis expressed that EU ministers are increasingly concerned as oil prices exceed $100 amid the ongoing Iran war disrupting energy markets.
Briefing summary
Kyriakos Pierrakakis, president of the Eurogroup, expressed concerns regarding the EU’s energy security amid rising oil prices exceeding $100 per barrel. He highlighted the ongoing tensions due to the Iran war as a destabilising factor in the energy markets.
During an interview with EU News‘ flagship show, he emphasised that EU ministers are testifying the critical situation, signalling a need for immediate responses to safeguard economic stability within the region.
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‘We are being tested’, Eurogroup president says as oil rises above $100

In an interview with EU News’, the president of the Eurogroup, Kyriakos Pierrakakis, stated that the EU is being tested and ministers are quite concerned about the events unfolding as oil currently sits above $100 and the Iran war continues to disrupt energy markets.
“The impact on energy prices is significant already and we want to see how we are going to meet that challenge on the ground,” he added.
Oil prices eclipsed $114 per barrel for the first time since 2022 on Monday as the Iran war intensified, jumping roughly 25% since Friday and threatening global production and shipping.
Similarly to when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Pierrakakis guaranteed that the Eurogroup is closely monitoring not just energy prices but also “the cost of fertilisers and air travel, food security and all other elements that affect inflation and the international economy.”
Meanwhile, the FT reported on Monday morning that the Group of Seven (G7) finance ministers will discuss a joint release of oil from emergency reserves coordinated by the International Energy Agency, in light of growing concerns about crude supply.











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