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Abstract:By Isla Binnie MADRID (Reuters) – Power trading platforms are urging the Spanish government not to intervene alone in the system that sets the price of electricity, in its bid to bring down sky-high utility bills, according to a letter seen by Reuters.
By Isla Binnie
MADRID Reuters – Power trading platforms are urging the Spanish government not to intervene alone in the system that sets the price of electricity, in its bid to bring down skyhigh utility bills, according to a letter seen by Reuters.
European countries are scrambling to agree on ways to manage surging gas and power prices, pushed higher by Russia‘s invasion of Ukraine, which are eating away at people’s spending power across the bloc.
Spain and Portugal received permission in March to take their own temporary measures to contain prices. The neighbours have been working on ways to limit the impact of expensive gas, which often sets the overall price in the electricity system.
Spanish Energy and Environment Minister Teresa Ribera has said the simplest option is to cap the price at which gas plants can sell their power to the market. Portugals Environment Minister Jose Duarte said last week the details were still being negotiated.
In response to these discussions, Spanish derivatives exchange MEFF and clearing house BME Clearing, along with Portuguese counterparts OMIP and OMIClear wrote to Spains Secretary of State for Energy to express their worries.
“In our opinion, a possible regulatory intervention that affects the pricesetting mechanism for the underlying asset, as an administrative measure unconnected to the effective market conditions, and that deviates from the pricesetting model that is common in all of Europe, would generate a high risk of regulatory uncertainty,” they said in the letter dated April 22.
Any changes must be made “in harmony with the rest of the EU”, the letter said.
Spanish electricity providers association AELEC – formed of power firms EDP, Endesa, Iberdrola and Viesgo – also voiced concerns about the possible unintended consequences of any mechanism to create a reference price for the gas used to generate electricity, in a letter to European officials dated April 8 and seen by Reuters.
AELEC said such a mechanism would cost more than it would save and suggested it would even encourage the use of gas.
The group said its members had not been consulted and based its comments on leaked documents as there had been no official communication from Spanish or Portuguese authorities at that time.
Ribera and Duarte will meet EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager in Brussels on Tuesday, Riberas ministry said without indicating what would be discussed.
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