Soaring Energy Prices Climb Up EU’s Political Agenda

Soaring Energy Prices Climb Up EU’s Political Agenda
European Commissioner for Energy Kadri Simson speaks during an online news conference on renewable energy at the EU headquarters in Brussels, Belgium on Nov. 19, 2020. (Francisco Seco/Pool via Reuters)
Reuters
10/7/2021
Updated:
10/7/2021

BRUSSELS—The European Union said on Wednesday it would examine the way its power market is run and consider proposals to revamp regulations within the bloc.

European electricity and gas prices have rocketed this year as tight gas supplies have collided with strong demand in economies recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Energy prices topped the EU’s political agenda on Wednesday, with environment ministers and the European Parliament each debating the issue after country leaders discussed possible responses on Tuesday evening.

The crisis has divided member states over whether Brussels should intervene.

“There is no question that we need to take policy measures,” EU energy commissioner Kadri Simson told the EU’s parliament.

The Commission will next week publish a menu of options for how governments and the EU could react, and launch a study into whether the EU’s power market is fit to deliver the bloc’s planned transition to green energy, Simson said.

Spain and France have called for a revamp of EU electricity regulation to decouple the price of power from the cost of gas.

“We believe this framework is sound, but we see the challenges,” Simson said.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said he and other countries had asked Brussels to offer an “audacious” response. “We need extraordinary, innovative measures ... we have asked for a joint purchase of gas,” he said.

Not all countries are convinced. EU regulators expect gas market conditions to ease next spring and some governments say the issue is best treated with national subsidies and tax breaks to cushion consumers from high bills—measures many countries have rolled out.

“It’s mainly something for the member states to address,” Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said. “We should look at what Europe can do collectively. There are proposals—some wilder, others less wild.”

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban on Wednesday called planned green policies an “indirect tax” on citizens. “Partly the reason why the prices are up is the fault of the Commission,” he said.