LONDON --
Germany’s power grid operators boosted the surcharge consumers pay
for renewable energy by 18 percent to a record, adding to pressure on
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government to act against rising electricity
bills.
The four grid companies set the fee paid through
power bills at 6.24 euro cents (8.5 cents) a kilowatt-hour next year
from 5.28 euro cents now, according to a statement on the website of
TransnetBW. The charge has more than quintupled since 2009, helping to
make German household power bills the third- highest in the European
Union. Big industrial users are largely exempt from the increase.
Merkel is looking for ways to reduce the cost of renewable- energy subsidies
after deciding to close the country’s nuclear power plants. The
government will reshape the 13-year-old EEG law granting support to
technologies such as wind and solar power once Merkel’s Christian
Democratic bloc reaches an agreement with another party to form a new
coalition following last month’s elections.
“The next German government will seek to slow new renewable energy projects
but will not impose retroactive changes to existing contracts,” Famke
Krumbmuller, an analyst with Eurasia Group in London, wrote in a note.
Fukushima Legacy
Nuclear power supplied about a quarter of Germany’s
power before an earthquake and tsunami triggered a meltdown at the
Fukushima plant in Japan in 2011. The disaster turned the German public
and politicians against atomic energy. The government is now seeking to
get 80 percent of its electricity from renewables by 2050 from about 23
percent now.
The total subsidy next year will amount to about 23.6
billion euros ($32 billion), which is added to consumers’ power bills.
The fee increase will raise the bill of the average German household
with 3,500 kilowatt-hours of consumption by about 34 euros a year.
Consumers and smaller companies shoulder a bigger portion of the cost of
the increase while big industrial users are largely exempt.
The BDI industry federation that represents about
100,000 companies including Siemens AG and Volkswagen AG said in a
statement today that Merkel’s third-term government needs to “radically
reform” the EEG to reduce industry costs. Steelmakers face 300 million
euros of extra charges next year and are “strained to the limit,” said
Hans Juergen Kerkhoff, head of German steel lobby Wirtschaftsvereinigung
Stahl.
Green Party
Renewables are wrongly blamed for the increase, said
Oliver Krischer, energy policy spokesman for the Greens party, which
today is continuing exploratory talks on a possible coalition with
Merkel’s conservatives in Berlin.
The fee is rising “because the power market isn’t
working and the old government has piled more and more industry aid onto
non-privileged electricity consumers,” Krischer said today in an
e-mailed statement.
Adding wind turbines and solar panels accounts for
only about a 10th of the fee’s increase, he said. Utilities such as EON
SE and RWE AG should alleviate the burden on households by passing on
falling wholesale power prices, he said.
Copyright 2013 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2013/10/merkel-seeks-renewable-energy-reform-as-households-pay-record-green-surcharge
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