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Document shows that the EU Commission will propose to help de-risk energy deals

Document shows that the EU Commission will propose to help de-risk energy deals

A draft of the Clean Industrial Deal, which was released on Tuesday, showed that the European Commission would propose next week a wide range of measures designed to help struggling EU industries. These include helping to reduce risk in power purchase agreements and simplifying state aid rules.

Ursula von der Leyen, the President of the European Commission in her second term, has focused on reversing Europe’s industrial decline. Von der Leyen released a Competitiveness Compass in January that outlined the Commission's goals for the next two-years.

The Clean Industrial Deal is one of the most important packages that the Commission will unveil next week. The Clean Industrial Deal aims to boost the clean tech sector and support energy-intensive industries who face "high energy prices, unfair global competition, and complex regulations".

In order to combat high energy costs, the Commission will propose an Action Plan for Affordably Priced Energy. The plan includes a programme pilot with the European Investment Bank that de-risks power purchase agreements, with an emphasis on small and mediumcap companies.

EIB also plans to introduce a "Grids manufacturing package" that will provide manufacturers with guarantees. In order to achieve the EU's targets on climate change, countries in Europe must upgrade and expand their electricity grids.

The Commission will also simplify the rules on state aid and carbon taxes by July of this year, introduce dynamic targets for gas storage and instruct member states to lower electricity taxes to legal minimum thresholds.

Last year, European utility companies reported that the high tax burden is preventing new investment.

The Commission wants to mobilize funds from the MFF budget to provide "short term relief...to improve business cases for EU-made, clean manufacturing". Reporting by Julia Payne, Kate Abnett Editing By David Goodman and Alexandra Hudson

(source: Reuters)