Spain will not order consumers to limit gas consumption, Hungary to remove energy caps

The Spanish government will not order consumers to limit their gas consumption, Energy Minister Teresa Ribera said on Thursday, after Spain said it would oppose a European Union proposal to cut gas usage.

“We will not introduce in a law an obligation to set the temperature of homes’ thermostats,” she said in an interview on local radio Cadena SER. The government would recommend people save energy, though, she said.
She added the government would protect industries’ gas consumption too.
On Wednesday, the minister said her government would oppose a European Union proposal to cut gas usage as the country does not depend on Russian gas after it has made efforts to invest in gas storage and gas liquefaction infrastructure in the past.
“The logic says that if our role in terms of solidarity is to be the reference in gas storage and re-exporting it is absurd to think we have the capacity to reduce in absolute terms our gas imports,” Ribera said.
The European Commission proposed a voluntary target for all EU countries to cut gas use by 15% from August to March, compared with their average consumption in the same period during 2016-2021.
The proposal would enable Brussels to make the target mandatory in a supply emergency if the EU declares a substantial risk of severe gas shortages due to Moscow further restricting supplies to Europe.
Meanwhile Hungary said it will scrap caps on gas and power prices for higher-usage households from August 1, which means many Hungarians will pay much more for the extra energy they consume.
The measures, flagged last week, will help the government plug holes in the budget after the price caps that have been in place for almost a decade put a heavy burden on state finances as global energy prices have rocketed higher.
The price caps helped nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban secure re-election in 2014 and had been a key plank of his election campaign in April when he won a fourth consecutive term in office.
Under the decree, households will be eligible for the current capped power price on electricity usage up to 2,523 KWh per year but will pay about double that for power consumed above that, although the government said that would still be below the market price.
For gas, the annual usage limit for price caps is 1,729 cubic metres per year, above which a price close to market prices applies, bringing a seven-fold increase in prices.
Gas supplies to Europe have tightened and fuel costs have soared since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February and Western sanctions imposed on Moscow in response, leaving countries scrambling to refill storage and find other supplies.
That has added to pressure on Orban, who is facing his toughest challenge since taking power in 2010, with inflation at a two-decade high, the forint currency near record lows and European Union funds on hold in a dispute over democratic standards.
Under a 15-year deal with Russian energy giant Gazprom GAZP.MM signed last year, Hungary receives 3.5 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas per year via Bulgaria and Serbia, and a further 1 bcm via a pipeline from Austria.
Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said earlier that Budapest was in talks to buy more gas on the global market before the heating season.
REUTERS

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