SPAIN
On February 3, the government laid out the details of its proposal to
cut subsidies for renewable-energy producers, a move that the producers
say could cause defaults. Successive Spanish governments have struggled
to give financial incentives to clean energy without passing on all of
the costs to consumers. That built up a debt temporarily borne by
utilities, though under government guarantee, potentially eroding the
credit strength of both. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s administration
has killed subsidies for new plants and scaled back those for existing
facilities, and this latest move will put them on a traditional rate
pegged to their cost of investment. The new formula, described in more
than 1,500 pages, calculates a level of “reasonable profitability”.
PAKISTAN
The government has decided to start Multi Year Tariff (MYT) in the
power distribution companies. The subsidies which are now being provided
across the board will be rationalised and optimised by targeting them
to the deserving segment of consumers.
GERMANY
Germany is struggling with rising energy costs as it phases out
nuclear power and tries to shift to more renewable energy. In a bid to
stem these rising costs in the coming years, energy minister Sigmar
Gabriel has proposed cutting the average subsidy for wind, solar and
other renewable power sources. On January 22, Chancellor Angela Merkel
urged her cabinet to join her in backing Gabriel’s plan to reduce
financial support for renewable energy. Gabriel’s plan includes reducing
the average subsidy for wind, solar and other renewable power sources
to an average of 0.12 per kilowatt-hour in 2015 from 0.17 at present.
However, the plan has been criticised by members of the governing
parties and business lobby groups.
GHANA
In September 2013, Ghana’s electricity tariff was increased by 78.9
per cent as the decline in cedi (Ghana’s currency) made imports of crude
and refined products more expensive. In November, the government
announced a reduction in the tariff by 25 per cent, meaning consumers
now pay 59.8 per cent. The action will translate into a subsidy of over
400 million cedi to be paid to the utility companies to maintain a
steady supply of energy.
ARGENTINA
In December, 2013, residents of Buenos Aires took to the streets to
protest after being left without power for weeks during a heatwave. The
government is currently stuck with an energy subsidy bill of 2.6 per
cent of the GDP, around half of the overall fiscal deficit. Experts say
the problem is not the production of electricity, but of distribution.
The government said that it would step in to take over electricity
distribution service in the capital if companies don’t resolve blackouts
sparked by the record demand. Energy firms rely on government
subsidies, estimated at around $11 billion in 2013, to cover their
costs. The government has now threatened to seize control of power
companies as it did in 2012, when it nationalised the country’s largest
oil company YPF.
MEXICO
For decades, Mexico has enjoyed a subsidy in residential power bills
and to industrial high volume users. Over the past decade, the cost of
this subsidy to the Mexican federal government has been growing at a
significant rate. But by law, written into the legislation establishing
any subsidy in Mexico is the word “temporary”. In August 2013, President
Peña Nieto decided that the subsidy would stay. The World Bank
criticised this stating that electricity was “too cheap” in Mexico,
promoting waste, and not stimulating the use of more expensive but
energy saving technology.
Source:- Indian Express
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