Former Trump energy secretary says EU efforts to control energy costs are like a Ponzi scheme

Watch CNBC's full interview with former U.S. Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette

Some of the measures that European governments have taken to keep electricity costs down can be described as a “Ponzi scheme,” according to Dan Brouillette, who served as energy secretary under the Trump administration.

“One of the easiest policy levers if you will, is that you can pass a bill, appropriate money and give money to citizens to pay their electricity bills,” Brouilette told CNBC’s Hadley Gamble on the sidelines of the Gastech conference in Milan on Monday.

He warned that such measures could have an “inflationary impact.”

When asked about whether such measures resemble a Ponzi scheme, Brouillette replied, “You could describe it that way. There’s no question about that.”

“It alleviates the immediate pain of not being able to pay the electricity bill, but the money just moves in a circle … It just goes from the consumer to the electricity company … it’s not a long-term solution,” he added.

The EU countries’ energy ministers will meet on Friday to discuss methods to control surging gas prices.

Europe’s gas prices jumped 30% higher on Monday after Russia announced that its main gas supply pipeline would remain shut indefinitely. Europe in recent months endured a sharp drop in gas exports from Russia, traditionally its largest energy supplier.

‘Produce more’

The former energy secretary said consumers can expect higher energy prices in the near term.

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Brouillette added that it was a “strange request by the [Biden] administration” to encourage U.S. oil producers to stop their exports and prioritize American consumers.

U.S. energy secretary Jennifer Granholm recently urged the country’s refiners to limit fuel exports, and to build fuel inventories instead.

Brouillette said such a move is “impossible,” because the oil market is in “backwardation.” Backwardation is when the current price of a commodity is trading higher than its futures price. That, according to him, means that producers have more incentives to put their product in the marketplace. He added that publicly traded companies that are in America have fiduciary responsibilities to their shareholders.

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