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Reuters
Reuters
Business
By Kate Abnett and Robert Muller

Gas price cap deal eludes EU countries, for now

FILE PHOTO: High-voltage power lines, an electricity pylon and wind turbines are seen near Pedrola, Spain, December 12, 2021. Picture taken on December 12, 2021. REUTERS/Albert Gea

The European Union will unveil proposals next week to launch joint gas buying within months and develop an alternative gas price benchmark, but a meeting of EU countries on Wednesday left it unresolved whether the package would include a gas price cap.

The 27-country EU is plotting its next move to tame soaring energy prices and shield consumers from surging bills, as Europe heads into a winter of scarce Russian gas, a cost of living crisis and the looming threat of recession.

FILE PHOTO: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen attends the Informal EU 27 Summit and Meeting within the European Political Community at Prague Castle, in Prague, Czech Republic, October 7, 2022. REUTERS/David W Cerny

After a meeting of EU energy ministers in Prague, EU energy commissioner Kadri Simson said the European Commission would lay out plans to develop an alternative EU gas price benchmark, and quickly launch joint gas buying among EU countries.

Simson said, however, it was still unclear if there was enough support among countries for a price cap on gas used for power generation to be added to the Oct. 18 package - a move many countries have sought.

"We will see over the weekend how we can proceed with capping the gas for power generation, if this is at that stage that we can say that there is a broad majority of member states supporting this measure," she said, adding that the package would set out how a "temporary mechanism" to limit gas prices could work, and the risks it would entail.

A pizza is baked in a traditional Italian pizza oven fired with natural gas, at a restaurant in Bonn, Germany, October 11, 2022. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay

Czech Industry Minister Jozef Sikela said ministers had agreed joint gas buying should launch by next summer, and that the Czech Republic - which holds the EU's rotating presidency - would call an emergency meeting of ministers in November to approve the upcoming proposals.

"I firmly believe that today's meeting has helped to bridge the divergent views between the member states," Sikela said.

IBERIAN EXAMPLE

FILE PHOTO: European Union flags flutter outside the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, June 17, 2022. REUTERS/Yves Herman

With gas prices almost 90% higher than a year ago, most EU countries say they want a gas price cap, but have struggled to agree on its design - be it a price cap on all gas, pipeline gas, or just gas used to produce electricity.

Spain and Portugal capped the price of gas used in power generation in June, which helped curb local power prices. Support has built among other EU countries to roll it out EU-wide - although some warn it could raise gas demand across the bloc, since Spain's gas use increased under the measure.

The meeting outcome aligned with many of the measures suggested in a proposal by Germany and the Netherlands - who warn broad gas price caps could leave Europe struggling to attract supplies - while swerving the cap that 15 other EU states have urged Brussels to propose.

The German and Dutch proposal, seen by Reuters, backed an alternative benchmark gas price, joint gas buying and negotiating lower prices with non-Russian suppliers - as well as tighter targets to save gas this winter.

Norway's energy minister Terje Aasland, who joined Wednesday's meeting along with other European non-EU members, said his country "doesn't recommend" a gas price cap.

European gas prices surged after Russia slashed gas deliveries to Europe following its invasion of Ukraine, blaming the cuts on Western sanctions imposed over the conflict.

EU countries have already rushed through emergency energy windfall profit levies, gas storage filling obligations, and electricity demand curbs to address the surge in energy prices.

But the pressure to agree more EU-wide measures has increased after Germany said it would spend up to 200 billion euros to shield its consumers and businesses from high energy costs - prompting a backlash from some countries about the uneven rollout of national support.

(Reporting by Kate Abnett, Robert Muller, Marine Strauss, Jason Hovet, Alan Charlish, Miranda Murray;Editing by John Chalmers, Tomasz Janowski and Keith Weir)

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