ENER Energy crisis: 15 countries call for EU-wide price cap on all gas imports

jward

passin' thru
Energy crisis: 15 countries call for EU-wide price cap on all gas imports
Sawah

The European Union must impose a broad price cap on all gas imports entering the bloc in order to bring soaring energy bills under control, a group of 15 member states has said in a joint letter.

“The price cap (…) is the one measure that will help every member state to mitigate the inflationary pressure, manage expectations and provide a framework in case of potential supply disruptions, and limit the extra profits in the sector,” the letter said. “This cap is the priority.”

The document, seen by Euronews, marks the first time the supporters of the gas cap join forces in an on-the-record declaration of intent.
It was signed by Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, France, Greece, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia and Spain, and sent on Tuesday evening to European Commissioner for Energy Kadri Simson.

The document comes in the lead-up to Friday’s meeting of EU energy ministers, who are expected to endorse an initial package of three emergency measures.
The calls for an EU-wide price cap on gas imports have gained traction in recent weeks after the record-breaking prices in August reached an all-time high of €346 per megawatt-hour.

Prices gradually decreased since that peak and currently hover just below the €200 mark — almost five times the levels a year ago.
The countries supporting the move believe the EU — using its leverage as the world’s largest single market — should impose a limit on the price it is willing to pay for gas imports.
The bloc’s tight energy market, which suffers from a supply-demand mismatch, is seeing higher fees than its Asian and American counterparts.

As the most expensive fuel to meet all power demands, gas sets the final price of electricity, even where cheaper and greener sources contribute to the total mix.
By capping gas prices, electricity bills could be artificially contained, the signatories believe.

“The energy crisis that started last fall has gotten worse over time and is now causing untenable inflationary pressures which are hitting our households and our businesses hard,” the letter says.
Germany opposes gas cap as European Commission shows hesitance
The 15 countries urged the European Commission to put forward an initial proposal for the gas cap at Friday’s ministerial meeting and later develop a formal legal text for negotiation and approval.

Yet, the European Commission is hesitant about the EU-wide gas cap and is still studying its potential risks.
The executive fears the unprecedented measure might scare shippers away at a time when the bloc is desperately looking for non-Russian supplies, particularly of liquefied natural gas (LNG), to make it through the winter without major blackouts or rationing.
Competition for LNG tankers is expected to heat up once temperatures begin falling and could increase even further if the Chinese economy picks up after a slowdown period.

Germany, the EU’s largest gas consumer, has raised similar concerns and remains opposed.
“If you introduce a price cap, as the EU unilaterally, and all the other consumers around the world don’t do it, then the gas will go to other consumers and thus we might have a shortage in gas supplies,” Germany’s Minister of State for Europe and Climate Anna Lührmann said last week.

Norway, which this year replaced Russia as the EU’s leading gas supplier, has said it is open to discussing lower fees but is “sceptical” about a wide ceiling.
So far, the European Commission has only suggested a price cap on Russian pipeline gas in order to deprive the Kremlin of revenues that can be possibly funnelled into the ongoing full-scale invasion of Ukraine that has proven to be very costly for Moscow so far.

“The approach towards Russia and other partners has to be different,” Commissioner Simson told Euronews last week.
Price limit not meant to target Moscow exclusively, letter says
But in their joint call, the 15 countries unambiguously rejected the idea of a price limit exclusively designed against Russian gas.

In turn, their proposal is indiscriminate, targeting all gas imports irrespective of geographical origin.
“The cap should be applied to all wholesale natural gas transactions, and not limited to import from specific jurisdictions,” the letter says.

“It can be designed in such a way as to ensure security of supply and the free flow of gas within Europe, while achieving our shared objective to reduce gas demand.”
The one-page letter does not provide technical details, such as how high the cap should be.

It is understood, however, that the cap would have to be somehow higher than the price paid in Asian and American markets in order to ensure Europe remains an attractive destination.

As a market instrument, the gas cap would require a qualified majority of member states to be approved and introduced.
As things stand now, the 15 signatories would fall short of the necessary votes, although they could recruit some countries that are seen as undecided, such as Sweden, Ireland and Cyprus.

The endorsement of coastal countries such as Spain, Italy, France and Belgium is crucial because they are the ones who receive the majority of LNG imports.
The Czech Republic — the current holder of the EU Council’s rotating presidency — did not add its name to the letter to maintain its position of impartial moderator.

posted for fair use
 

kochevnik

Senior Member
The commodities market is a very tough animal to control - I would say IMPOSSIBLE to control actually.

To get around a price cap - all the commodities guys have to do is ramp the price of energy to the moon in the USA and the rest of the world and now Europe has to follow and STILL has to pay the higher prices anyways - and that's assuming that whatever 'caps' they impose are somewhat flexible - which I'm 99 percent sure they won't be.

What happens when u put price controls on things ?

The supply disappears.

This plan is going to kill a lot of Europeans.

And furthermore - Putin has categorically stated - if there are any price controls implemented on Russian gas - then ALL forms of Russian energy supply comes to a total halt. And pretending this is for 'other' entities as well is a crock - only a complete moron would believe this is not aimed directly at Russia.
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member

'Heated' and 'really ugly': Europe fails to thrash out details on gas price cap as talks turn sour​

Story by Silvia Amaro • 2h ag
CNBC
CNBC


BRUSSELS — European energy ministers failed to reach a compromise over a cap on natural gas prices after "heated," "ugly" and "tough" discussions.

The 27 EU leaders agreed in late October to give their political support to a limit on natural gas prices after months and months of discussions on how to best tackle the current energy crisis.

The European Commission, the executive arm of the EU, and the bloc's energy ministers were then tasked to solve the more specific, and practical, differences on the measure.

However, the divergences are so acute in Brussels that energy ministers have not managed to find a compromise and instead have convened a new emergency meeting for mid-December.

"The tension was touchable," one EU official, who followed the discussions but preferred to remain anonymous due to the sensitive nature of the talks, told CNBC via telephone. The same official said the conversations were "very tough" because of a "fake price cap."

In an attempt to bring everyone on board, the European Commission proposed a cap at 275 euros per megawatt hour. The cap would also only kick in when prices are 58 euros ($60.46) higher than a global LNG (liquefied natural gas) reference price for 10 consecutive trading days within a two-week period.

Countries eager to implement the cap, most notably Poland, Spain and Greece, say this proposal is not realistic as it is so high that it is unlikely to ever be triggered.

"The gas price cap which is in the document currently doesn't satisfy any single country. It's a kind of joke for us," Anna Moskwa, Poland's minister for climate, said in Brussels Thursday.

Other EU officials, speaking to CNBC on the condition of anonymity, mentioned how the conversations were "heated." One of them went as far as saying that "at one point, it got really ugly."

This reflects how poorer and more indebted EU nations feel about the energy crisis that's impacted the region since Russia's invasion of Ukraine back in February. With less fiscal room to support domestic consumers, these countries need EU-wide measures to contain energy costs at home.

"I hope we get there next week," another official following the meeting told CNBC under the condition of anonymity.
Speaking at a press conference Thursday, Jozef Sikela, the Czech minister for industry and trade, also said: "We're not opening the Champagne yet, but putting the bottle in the fridge."

Energy ministers are expected to meet again on Dec. 13, just before the heads of state meet in Brussels for their final EU summit of the year. Until then, the commission's proposal is likely to suffer alterations in the hope of bringing everyone on board.

Prices on the front-month Title Transfer Facility (TTF) European benchmark closed at around 129 euros per megawatt hour on Thursday. They had reached a historic peak back in August at almost 350 euros per megawatt hour.
 

West

Senior
Muse..

Once something is price capped in the private sector, that product or service will become unavailable.

Then government can take over and now , not only will it still be unavailable but super expensive. And the private sector will be blamed.

That's how it works.
 

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Energy crisis: 15 countries call for EU-wide price cap on all gas imports
Sawah

The European Union must impose a broad price cap on all gas imports entering the bloc in order to bring soaring energy bills under control, a group of 15 member states has said in a joint letter.

“The price cap (…) is the one measure that will help every member state to mitigate the inflationary pressure, manage expectations and provide a framework in case of potential supply disruptions, and limit the extra profits in the sector,” the letter said. “This cap is the priority.”

The document, seen by Euronews, marks the first time the supporters of the gas cap join forces in an on-the-record declaration of intent.
It was signed by Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, France, Greece, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia and Spain, and sent on Tuesday evening to European Commissioner for Energy Kadri Simson.

The document comes in the lead-up to Friday’s meeting of EU energy ministers, who are expected to endorse an initial package of three emergency measures.
The calls for an EU-wide price cap on gas imports have gained traction in recent weeks after the record-breaking prices in August reached an all-time high of €346 per megawatt-hour.

Prices gradually decreased since that peak and currently hover just below the €200 mark — almost five times the levels a year ago.
The countries supporting the move believe the EU — using its leverage as the world’s largest single market — should impose a limit on the price it is willing to pay for gas imports.
The bloc’s tight energy market, which suffers from a supply-demand mismatch, is seeing higher fees than its Asian and American counterparts.

As the most expensive fuel to meet all power demands, gas sets the final price of electricity, even where cheaper and greener sources contribute to the total mix.
By capping gas prices, electricity bills could be artificially contained, the signatories believe.

“The energy crisis that started last fall has gotten worse over time and is now causing untenable inflationary pressures which are hitting our households and our businesses hard,” the letter says.
Germany opposes gas cap as European Commission shows hesitance
The 15 countries urged the European Commission to put forward an initial proposal for the gas cap at Friday’s ministerial meeting and later develop a formal legal text for negotiation and approval.

Yet, the European Commission is hesitant about the EU-wide gas cap and is still studying its potential risks.
The executive fears the unprecedented measure might scare shippers away at a time when the bloc is desperately looking for non-Russian supplies, particularly of liquefied natural gas (LNG), to make it through the winter without major blackouts or rationing.
Competition for LNG tankers is expected to heat up once temperatures begin falling and could increase even further if the Chinese economy picks up after a slowdown period.

Germany, the EU’s largest gas consumer, has raised similar concerns and remains opposed.
“If you introduce a price cap, as the EU unilaterally, and all the other consumers around the world don’t do it, then the gas will go to other consumers and thus we might have a shortage in gas supplies,” Germany’s Minister of State for Europe and Climate Anna Lührmann said last week.

Norway, which this year replaced Russia as the EU’s leading gas supplier, has said it is open to discussing lower fees but is “sceptical” about a wide ceiling.
So far, the European Commission has only suggested a price cap on Russian pipeline gas in order to deprive the Kremlin of revenues that can be possibly funnelled into the ongoing full-scale invasion of Ukraine that has proven to be very costly for Moscow so far.

“The approach towards Russia and other partners has to be different,” Commissioner Simson told Euronews last week.
Price limit not meant to target Moscow exclusively, letter says
But in their joint call, the 15 countries unambiguously rejected the idea of a price limit exclusively designed against Russian gas.

In turn, their proposal is indiscriminate, targeting all gas imports irrespective of geographical origin.
“The cap should be applied to all wholesale natural gas transactions, and not limited to import from specific jurisdictions,” the letter says.

“It can be designed in such a way as to ensure security of supply and the free flow of gas within Europe, while achieving our shared objective to reduce gas demand.”
The one-page letter does not provide technical details, such as how high the cap should be.

It is understood, however, that the cap would have to be somehow higher than the price paid in Asian and American markets in order to ensure Europe remains an attractive destination.

As a market instrument, the gas cap would require a qualified majority of member states to be approved and introduced.
As things stand now, the 15 signatories would fall short of the necessary votes, although they could recruit some countries that are seen as undecided, such as Sweden, Ireland and Cyprus.

The endorsement of coastal countries such as Spain, Italy, France and Belgium is crucial because they are the ones who receive the majority of LNG imports.
The Czech Republic — the current holder of the EU Council’s rotating presidency — did not add its name to the letter to maintain its position of impartial moderator.

posted for fair use


HA HA.jpeg

Price caps lead to scarcity - and price caps are often tried during periods of scarcity so that the Politicians can be seen to be "Doing Something"

Ha Ha.
 
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