EnergyNewsWorld EU green lights first-ever cap for gas prices by Asminnie Moonsammy 19/12/2022 written by Asminnie Moonsammy 19/12/2022 3 min read A+A- Reset FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 344 SOURCE: Euronews โ After months of political bickering that has seen a dizzying succession of draft proposals, joint letters, emergency meetings and increasingly exasperated statements, the European Union on Monday approved the first-ever cap on gas prices. EU ministers hammered out a deal on the cap during the last Energy Council of the year in Brussels. โAnother mission impossible accomplished,โ Czech Trade Minister Jozef Sรญkela told reporters. โTo agree today was not only our obligation,โ he said. โMost importantly it was our duty towards our citizens and businesses who were waiting for us to act.โ The unprecedented measure is aimed at curbing energy prices as the bloc reels from a crisis exacerbated by Russiaโs decision to stop supplying the EU with fossil fuels to retaliate against sanctions over its war in Ukraine. The cap, as approved by ministers, will be triggered when gas prices reach โฌ180 per megawatt-hour during at least three consecutive trading days. This is a significant shift from the initial proposal by the European Commission which planned for the cap to be activated when gas prices reach โฌ275/MWh for 10 consecutive days. Prices traded last week at around โฌ135 per megawatt-hour. You Might Be Interested In Crystal Beckles-Holder, 2nd runner up in regional competition Bangladesh opposition demand new vote Business owners disappointed Safeguards to ensure safety of supply The gas cap, which is to be implemented on 1 February and come into force on 15 February, will however come with stringent conditions attached and safeguards for suspension in case it backfires. EU officials had previously described it as an instrument of โdeterrenceโ aimed at preventing the most excessive episodes of volatility and speculation. The cap is to apply to the Title Transfer Facility (TTF), Europeโs leading hub for gas trading, and other similar venues. The prices set every day at the TTF have a strong influence on the bills that companies and consumers receive every month. It will be automatically activated but only if two key conditions are met: If TTF prices reach or surpass โฌ180 per megawatt-hour for at least 3 days. If TTF prices are โฌ35 higher than the market reference of liquefied natural gas (LNG) during at least 3 consecutive trading days. The EUโs goal is to prevent the record-breaking surge the TTF experienced over the summer when governments rushed to pump gas into their underground storages. Prices have since then stabilised but remain high. Once activated, it will remain active for 20 days but in case the cap leads to a drop in gas supplies, forces rationing, fuels financial instability, jeopardises existing contracts or encourages power consumption, it can be outright suspended by a decision of the European Commission. The cap will exclusively apply to one-month ahead, three-month ahead and year-ahead contracts struck at the TTF, which represent over a fifth of the hubโs transactions but have a large influence on all gas transactions. โEveryone should be held responsibleโ Such safeguards were of particular concern for countries like Germany, the Netherlands, Austria, Denmark and Estonia, who have for months expressed deep scepticism regarding the price cap, arguing reliable supplies were a greater priority than affordable prices. On the other hand, countries like Belgium, Poland, Italy, Greece, Spain and Portugal have insisted the price cap was an indispensable tool to combat the energy crisis and protect consumers and companies against skyrocketing bills. Germany voted in favour of the cap on Monday while both the Netherlands and Austria abstained. Hungary voted against it. Budapest described the cap as a โharmful, dangerous and completely unnecessaryโ measure and railed against the fact it required a qualified majority and not unanimity to be introduced. โWhen it turns out to have been a completely unnecessary, dangerous, damaging measure for the whole of Europe, then everyone should be held responsible,โ Foreign Minister Pรฉter Szijjรกrtรณ said. Energy ministers appeared to brush off a recent threat from the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), the American firm that operates financial exchanges and clearing houses, that it would pull out of the TTF if the cap were to be introduced. ICE argued in a statement seen by Reuters that the market correction mechanism would be imposed on customers and market infrastructure without time for sustained testing and careful risk management. Asminnie Moonsammy You may also like Spirit Airlines goes out of business after 34 years, ending operations immediately 02/05/2026 Mottley congratulates Browne on fourth term 01/05/2026 Growth strong, but transformation lacking โ Marshall 01/05/2026