"It is urgent to establish a genuine Energy Union. It will be an essential pillar of the EU sovereignty," he said in a statement.
Michel blamed lack of uniformity for the current chaos on the EU’s single market, with the 27 competing among themselves for vanishing supplies. He said the member states must be prepared to give up their national competences for the sake of acting "more collectively."
"We must be willing to face the taboos surrounding national and EU competences. A resilient Energy Union will not magically appear from 27 national energy mixes — we must make them compatible," he said.
The new union, according to Michel, should be able to reduce energy consumption, diversify supply sources and use the collective buying power to avoid competition that has been driving up prices for all.
The EU imported 380 billion euros ($369 billion) worth of energy in the first half of 2022, which is close to what it usually pays for an entire year, Michel said. Another half a trillion euros has been spent on efforts to cushion the impact of soaring energy bills on households and businesses after the EU curbed imports of Russian fossil fuels in retaliation for its operation in Ukraine.