Retail electricity prices below EU average in first half of ’23

Retail electricity price levels in Greece were well below the EU average in the first half of 2023, giving the country a 17th place ranking for most expensive low-voltage electricity among member states, Eurostat data has shown.

Greece ended the six-month period with retail electricity prices averaging 233 euros per MWh, compared to the EU average of 289 euros per MWh over the same period.

Calculations for these figures include taxes and other charges, but not subsidies offered to consumers.

The Netherlands topped the list with an average price of 475 euros per MWh in the first half of 2023, while Bulgaria was placed at the bottom end with an average price of 114 euros per MWh.

As for EU member states ranked slightly above Greece, Lithuania averaged 281 euros per MWh, Sweden followed with 269 euros per MWh, Austria was next 265 euros per MWh, Ireland’s average was 248 euros per MWh, and Finland, one place above Greece, ended the first half last year with an average price of 238 euros per MWh.

On the contrary, electricity supply for non-residential consumers in Greece, averaging 213 euros per MWh, was slightly above the EU average of 210 euros per MWh. Even so, Greece’s ranking remained the same, 17th most expensive, for this category.

Romania topped the list of most expensive non-residential electricity with an average of 329 euros per MWh, while Iceland ranked lowest with an average of 78 euros per MWh in the first half last year.

 

US sees American interests in PPC’s southeast Europe plans

Greek power utility PPC’s aspirations to establish itself as a key energy market player in the Balkans and southeast Europe is being embraced by US investors who, through such a development, see further potential for interests of their own, given the excellent standing of Greek-US bilateral ties.

Protecting the region’s energy sufficiency from the threat posed by Russia remains a top priority for the US, which also sees potential for American interests in PPC’s plans to penetrate markets in the Balkans and beyond with large quantities of renewable energy.

PPC’s chief executive Giorgos Stassis made note of the power utility’s plans for southeast Europe, and also referred to the wider Three Seas Initiative in an announcement made yesterday following a meeting with Geoffrey Pyatt, US Assistant Secretary of State for Energy Resources.

The Three Seas Initiative, presently covering 13 countries between the Baltic Sea, Black Sea and Adriatic Sea, aims to attract major investments from the EU and the US in the areas of road and rail transport, economy, energy infrastructure for transmission of renewable energy, fiber optic development and everything needed to launch 5G telecommunication networks.

Greece, Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia are all included in the Three Seas Initiative, while Ukraine and Moldova were granted membership rights last September.

PPC chief to take part in Romanian Three Seas meeting

Greece aims to bolster its geopolitical influence in the Balkans through energy, power utility PPC’s takeover of Italian group ENEL’s Romanian subsidiary ENEL Romania being a key part of this strategy.

In addition to PPC’s takeover of ENEL Romania, Helleniq Energy recently invested in Romania and had been preceded by Mytilineos – both in renewable energy projects.

PPC’s ENEL Romania takeover has prompted an announcement from Romanian president Klaus Iohannis, who named Greece as a new member of The Three Seas, a diplomatic initiative taken by Romania’s political leadership to bring together EU member states and candidates located between the Baltic, Adriatic and Black Seas for collaboration in the fields of energy, infrastructure and the digital economy.

Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Ukraine are the other members of The Three Seas initiative.

Iohannis, Romania’s president, will host a two-day meeting in Bucharest on September 6 and 7 for talks on collaboration in these domains. Ministers and entrepreneurs representing the aforementioned countries, including PPC’s chief executive officer Giorgos Stassis, energypress sources have informed, will take part at the upcoming Bucharest meeting.

Romania has become a geopolitical focal point as a result of the country’s close proximity to war-entangled Ukraine. In addition, Bucharest has established a pivotal role as a result of its support of Ukraine in the war with Russia and Moldova’s EU membership quest. Romania has also facilitated the movement of grain across its borders.