Latest News

Greek PM makes fresh plea to EU to deal with power price distinctions

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis prompted the European Commission on Tuesday to tackle power cost discrepancies across the bloc, repeating previous require an electrical power market with a more even sharing of electrical power.

Greece and other countries in southeastern Europe have actually seen power costs rising much faster than their northern peers because the Ukraine war interrupted Russian pipeline gas materials to Europe.

After power rates spiked in Greece last summer, Mitsotakis composed to the European Commission requiring a service to the unacceptable differences in electrical power costs throughout Europe.

In a brand-new letter to the European Commission, seen , Mitsotakis said power costs stayed elevated and asked Brussels to move faster against electrical energy cost variations which he stated broke the guideline of the totally free flow of items in the bloc.

Greece is developing more renewables and diversifying its gas resources. But with costs pegged to the more expensive gas-fuelled power plants and without adequate cross-border integration, there is in some cases excessive power for one market, requiring manufacturers to curtail supply.

We can not have one country with electrical power prices in triple digits while, at the same hour, another country has zero or negative costs, Mitsotakis wrote in the letter.

In electricity, we need a new push on the internal (EU). market, he added, proposing an EU task force to look at. regulative and technical options and new financial investments to help. increase cross-border power flows in the 27-nation bloc.

The EU has actually estimated that it would need to invest 584 billion. euros in updating its power grids this years to ensure grids. can bring larger quantities of green energy.

With regard to power grids, the EU should review its. long-lasting planning to take into account available resources and. innovations in each country and include settlement for those. whose investments offered outsized advantages, Mitsotakis stated.

(source: Reuters)