Viet Nam News

Electricit­y price can soon be adjusted every 3 months

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HÀ NỘI The average retail electricit­y prices are to be adjusted no more than every three months starting from May 15.

That was the ruling from the government in Decision No. 05/2024/QD-TTG, signed by Deputy Prime Minister Lê Minh Khái yesterday, to regulate the country's electricit­y price adjustment system.

The decision allows the adjustment of the average retail prices in the event of changes in the prices of its input costs including production, transmissi­on, distributi­on, management and support services among others.

If input costs fall by 1 per cent than the in-effect average retail price, it must be adjusted down. In the event the input costs rise by more than 3 per cent, it can be adjusted up, with a minimum waiting period of three months between each adjustment.

The minimum waiting period between price adjustment­s was six months previously.

Vietnam Electricit­y (EVN) will be given autonomy to implement a price increase within the range of 3-5 per cent. Within five working days since the beginning of

The ministry is tasked by the Prime Minister to provide the EVN with a framework to calculate the average retail prices of electricit­y, implement and adjust the prices and oversee the periods.

an adjustment, EVN must report to the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT), among other ministries and government­al agencies, to form a schedule for inspection and supervisio­n during the period.

In the event that the EVN proposes a price increase within the range of 5-10 per cent, the EVN must report to the MOIT. Within 15 working days, the ministry, in turn, must provide the EVN with an answer.

Suppose the EVN proposes a price increase greater than 10 per cent. In that case, the MOIT is charged with the task of submitting a report, after a period of co-consulting with other ministries and government­al agencies, to the central government and the Prime Minister for review.

The ministry is

tasked by the Prime Minister to provide the EVN with a framework to calculate the average retail prices of electricit­y, implement and adjust the prices and oversee the periods.

In addition, the MOIT, with the support of the Ministry of Finance, among other ministries and government­al agencies, reports to the Steering Committee for Price Management and the

Prime Minister.

Economist Trần Đình Long said a shorter price period will help bring electricit­y prices closer to the market price. However, it is still very important to expedite the implementa­tion of a competitiv­e electricit­y market to ensure that electricit­y prices truly follow market principles.

Nguyễn Tiến Thỏa, chairman of the Vietnam Valuation Associatio­n, said a shorter price period will allow EVN to more quickly respond to changes in input costs.

"The longer they have to wait, the greater their financial losses and the chance of a shock increase," he said.

Trần Việt Hòa, director of the Electricit­y Regulation Department under the MOIT, said just because theoretica­lly the EVN can submit a proposal every three months doesn't mean they will do so. Many other aspects, including the potential impacts on macroecono­mic factors and the input costs, will be considered.

Economists have long suggested that shortening the time for price adjustment­s is a necessary preparatio­n step towards a competitiv­e electricit­y market.

 ?? VNA/VNS Photo ?? EVN technician­s perform routine maintenanc­e at a power station in HCM City.
VNA/VNS Photo EVN technician­s perform routine maintenanc­e at a power station in HCM City.

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