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Spain’s government feels heat over sky-high electricity prices

Scorching heat has caused power prices to soar in Spain, leading to renewed tensions in the country's leftist coalition government over how to lower ballooning electricity bills.

Spain's government feels heat over sky-high electricity prices
Photo: Cristina Quicler/AFP

A recent heatwave which sent temperatures soaring as high as 47 degrees Celsius (117F) in the southern region of Andalusia caused demand for electricity to jump as people turned on their air conditioners, putting further pressure on power prices which were already high due to a global natural gas supply crunch.

“Everything indicates the month of August will end with the highest electricity bill in history,” consumer rights group Facua said Tuesday.

It predicts the average monthly household electricity bill this month will hit €92 ($107), a 44 percent increase over August 2020.

The jump in prices has largely offset the temporary reduction in the value-added tax (VAT) on electricity bills — to 10 percent from 21 percent — which Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s government introduced in July to provide relief to consumers.

Far-left party Podemos, the junior partner in Sánchez’s coalition government, has accused the administration of not doing enough to cut power bills.

The government “must intervene in the power market and move towards a system of regulated prices,” Labour Minister Yolanda Díaz, one of the co-leaders of the party and also the third highest-ranking member of the government, told the Ctxt magazine.

“All of this is due to a process of privatisations in the electricity sector… which has resulted in an oligopoly that has led to repeated price increases every year,” she added.

Spain at the end of 2020 had the fifth-highest household electricity prices in the European Union after Germany, Denmark, Belgium and Ireland, according to Eurostat, the bloc’s statistics office.

The country relies more heavily on natural gas to produce electricity than other European nations such as neighbouring France, which has a significant nuclear power sector, said Jordi Castilla, the spokesman for consumer group Facua.

The mercury hits 47ºC during in Seville on August 13th, 2021. – Scorching heat has caused power prices to soar in Spain. Photo: Cristina Quicler/AFP

Podemos has called for the government to issue a decree that imposes an “immediate” ceiling on power prices and has threatened to stage street protests over the issue, in a country where this question of energy poverty gets regular media attention.

The proposal has been rejected by the Socialist party, which argues Spain must respect European market rules for electricity.

“To say that we can solve this with a decree generates false hopes,” Minister for the Ecological Transition Teresa Ribera, a socialist, said last week in a TV interview.

“Look what is happening in the rest of Europe, it is not a problem that is specific to Spain.”

Ribera has instead called on Brussels to change the rules that set power prices in the European Union, which are, according to her, dictated by the price of fossil-fuels, a system which hurts gas-dependent Spain.

READ ALSO: Why is electricity in Spain more expensive than ever?

The minister wrote to the European Commission a few weeks ago to request alterations to the system, but Brussels “answered that it had no intention of introducing changes”, she told news radio Cadena Ser earlier this week, adding that such a position was “not reasonable”.

Ribera, however, has raised the idea of creating a public firm to manage the country’s hydroelectric plants, a measure long demanded by Podemos to replace major power firms which it accuses of making huge profits on the backs of consumers.

But this will ony be possible when existing electrical power concessions expire, which will only happen in a few years.

Podemos and consumer groups are asking for the government to make the drop in the VAT tax on household electricity bills permanent.

Taxes account for over 45 percent of the electricity bill in Spain, compared to an average of around 40 percent in the European Union.

Sánchez’s government earlier this month extended until October a ban on cutting off electricity and other utilities over unpaid bills as part of measures aimed at helping vulnerable people hit by the economic fallout of the pandemic.

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POLITICS

Spain ex-minister slams ‘show trial’ over face mask scandal

An ex-minister and former confidante of Spain's Pedro Sánchez on Monday said he had been subjected to a "show trial" over a face mask procurement scandal at his former ministry.

Spain ex-minister slams 'show trial' over face mask scandal

Addressing a Senate committee looking into an alleged kickbacks scandal linked to mask procurement during the pandemic when he was transport minister, José Luis Ábalos said he knew nothing about the matter.

At the heart of the case is his former close aide Koldo García, who was arrested on February 21st over an alleged scheme that let a small previously unknown firm obtain contracts worth €53 million ($57.5 million) to supply masks to public authorities, which prosecutors say generated €9.5 million in kickbacks.

READ MORE: What is Spain’s ‘Caso Koldo’ corruption scandal all about?

Ábalos, who has not been charged with any offence, has nonetheless been ejected from the Socialist party after refusing to resign as a show of “political responsibility”, expressing his frustration at Monday’s hearing.

“This (whole thing) is a show trial” which does not respect “the principle of a presumption of innocence,” he told senators in the upper house of parliament, which is dominated by the right-wing opposition Popular Party (PP).

Asked what he knew about the matter, he said: “Nothing. And it’s not even clear to me there was such a scheme.”

Ábalos held the transport portfolio from 2018-2021 in Sánchez’s left-wing government and for years was a key member of his Socialist party.

In a court document published in the Spanish media, the investigating judge identified Ábalos as an “intermediary” but he has not been charged with any offence.

Addressing senators, Ábalos said at the height of the pandemic, his undersecretary was the one purchasing masks and not Koldo, saying he was “satisfied” with how things were managed because his was one of the first ministries “to obtain (protective healthcare) supplies”.

Acknowledging his “personal link” with Koldo, who was often photographed at his side, he said it was “a surprise” to learn of his personal enrichment when the matter came to light.

The scandal is particularly sensitive for Sánchez, who took power in 2018 after a huge corruption scandal brought down the former PP government, and has prided himself on the integrity and transparency of his administration.

Ábalos told senators he had not spoken to Sánchez since the scandal erupted, and criticised the Socialist party for expelling him without him being charged.

He was replaced as transport minister during a 2021 government reshuffle, and the PP has claimed his removal showed Sánchez was aware of the scandal and had sought to sideline him.

García appeared before the Senate last month, but invoked his “right not to testify” on grounds a legal inquiry into the matter has begun, while insisting his conscience was “absolutely clear”.

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