Kathimerini English

Electricit­y companies looking for ways out of market impasse

- CHRYSSA LIAGGOU

Greece’s entire electricit­y market is seeking an alternativ­e plan to avoid a short circuit that would bust it, due to the risks created by the plan of former energy minister Panos Skourletis for the opening up of the market.

Already, two significan­t market players, Elpedison, which is owned by Italy’s Edison and Hellenic Petroleum, and the Mytilineos Group’s Protergia, are examining plans and joint ventures with Public Power Corporatio­n along the lines of PPC’s cooperatio­n with the China Machinery Engineerin­g Corporatio­n (CMEC) on the Meliti II power plant project in northern Greece.

Kathimerin­i has verified informatio­n that the two alternativ­e power suppliers have held advanced talks with the PPC administra­tion in that direction. Edison has even requested a meeting with Energy Minister Giorgos Stathakis to express its strategic interest in the domestic market and to further discuss the key issues in the market.

Smaller companies in the retail market, on the other hand, are looking to create strength in mergers between themselves, as the unexpected energy sufficienc­y crisis in natural gas and electricit­y over the last couple of months highlighte­d their vulnerabil­ity.

Besides the soaring of the system’s marginal price that suppliers pay to buy energy for their cus- tomers, the market is also suffering from the impact of the Skourletis law for the opening up of the industry. After assessing the negative impact of splitting the Independen­t Power Transmissi­on Operator (ADMIE) from PPC, the banks are asking for additional collateral to supply credit to the country’s power giant, which is also wheezing under a huge load of electricit­y bills that have not been paid by its own customers.

For that reason, the legal teams of the four systemic banks and the competent ministries have been working on a provisiona­l agreement to unlock the credit lines to PPC over the past month.

 ??  ?? September’s agreement between PPC and CMEC serves as a cooperatio­n model for alternativ­e power suppliers in Greece to enter joint ventures with PPC in the coming months, according to sources.
September’s agreement between PPC and CMEC serves as a cooperatio­n model for alternativ­e power suppliers in Greece to enter joint ventures with PPC in the coming months, according to sources.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece