Energy Market Bubbles under the Green Transition
Abstract
. Russia’s weaponization of gas supplies has heightened concerns over the energy trilemma—security, affordability, and sustainability—emphasizing the
need to reduce dependence on volatile fossil fuel markets. This paper investigates speculative price dynamics in energy markets during the recent
energy crisis, focusing on gas, electricity, low-carbon hydrogen, and renewable Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs). We apply the Phillips, Shi, and
Yu (2015) mild explosivity (PSY) test to daily and weekly benchmark price
series to detect and date-stamp bubble episodes. Our analysis identifies two
significant periods of widespread exuberance: one beginning in mid-2021 and
another peaking in August 2022, coinciding with the Nord Stream I pipeline
shutdown. These results provide empirical evidence of boom-and-bust cycles
driven by both geopolitical supply shocks and market speculation. The findings stress the structural fragility of fossil-based energy systems and reinforce
the urgency of accelerating the transition toward more stable, low-carbon energy alternatives.
Energy Market Bubbles under the Green Transition
Palabras Clave
.bubble, gas futures, power futures, PPA, Low carbon hydrogen, green transition, global energy crisis, speculation

