Arab Times

EU seeks to ease pain of soaring energy bills

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BRUSSELS, Oct 21, (AP): European Union leaders met Thursday to discuss ways to ease the pain of soaring energy bills for consumers, while seeking to safeguard energy supplies to the 27-nation bloc by speeding up the transition away from polluting fossil fuels to sustainabl­e alternativ­es.

The energy debate at the EU leaders’ summit comes amid spiraling prices that are pummeling households and businesses still reeling from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The talks also come just 10 days ahead of the opening of a U.N. climate summit that is widely seen as the last chance to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustr­ial levels.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the EU’s executive and its member states already are working to ease the burden of soaring energy bills on households and businesses.

She said leaders also will have to look at the way energy markets function but stressed that “in the mid and long term, it is very clear that the strategy has to be to invest massively in clean and renewable energy” produced in Europe.

The debate on spiraling energy prices also takes place against a backdrop of frosty relations with Russia, a key supplier of gas to Europe.

Von der Leyen said Wednesday that with the bloc importing 90% of its gas - much of it from strategic rival Russia - “this makes us vulnerable.” Gas makes up one quarter of all European energy consumptio­n.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell called the energy price explosion this year the consequenc­e “of a big geopolitic­al game.”

Von der Leyen has said that while Norway had raised its gas exports to the bloc to meet increased demand, Russia’s Gazprom had not gone beyond honoring its long-term contracts with the EU.

Gas prices have soared this year to 95 euros from about 19 euros per megawatt hour, affecting everything from household heating bills to farmers and food producers. The EU’s executive commission says that lower-income households are hardest hit because they spend a higher proportion of their income on energy. Many countries have already offered energy tax cuts to ease the pain.

While all leaders want to minimize the impact of soaring energy prices on their population­s, they differ on how to do it.

Entering Thursday’s summit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that the issue of soaring energy prices should be differenti­ated from the long-term fight against climate change.

“I think that we should react calmly; we in Germany will do so in any case,” she said.

Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De

Croo said his country is among those that are helping households and businesses foot rising power bills. But he added that longterm solutions must also be found.

“And in the long term, there is only one solution - invest more in renewable energy so we are less vulnerable to price fluctuatio­ns for fossil fuels,” he said.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has blamed the hike specifical­ly on the Commission’s Green Deal plans that includes cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 55% by 2030 and making the bloc carbon neutral by 2050.

The current crisis has reignited a debate on whether the EU should promote nuclear power projects as a way of becoming more energy independen­t. That could be done by making them eligible for billions of euros as part of the European Green Deal and coronaviru­s recovery fund.

 ?? ?? Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, and French President Emmanuel Macron arrive for a round table meeting at an EU summit in Brussels, Thursday, Oct. 21, 2021. (AP)
Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, and French President Emmanuel Macron arrive for a round table meeting at an EU summit in Brussels, Thursday, Oct. 21, 2021. (AP)

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