Suppliers pressured by partial recovery of public service sums

Distribution network operator DEDDIE/HEDNO has, since April last year, been partially covering monthly public service compensation (YKO) reimbursments entitled by the country’s electricity suppliers, a shortfall putting their budgets under pressure.

This deficit is expected to widen further over the coming months without any specific solution yet in place.

Electricity suppliers are recovering an average of between 60 and 65 percent of amounts they should be receiving, energypress sources have informed.

The public service compensation special account’s revenues have decreased as a result of a drop in wholesale electricity prices and retail electricity tariffs, but outlays subsidizing electricity used by consumers on the country’s non-interconnected islands and by low-income households have remained steady.

The country’s public service compensation special account entered deficit territory for the first time in April last year, and, as a consequence, as foreseen by sector regulations, DEDDIE/HEDNO has, over the past 11 months, been asking electricity retailers to partially cover amounts they should be receiving for public services. This essentially means electricity suppliers are financing public services with their own capital.

Consequently, respective amounts owed to suppliers are adding up to tens of millions of euros, a significant additional burden on their finances.

The public service compensation special account ended 2023 with a deficit of roughly 300 million euros, a level expected to be repeated this year.

The energy ministry is promoting a plan to divide this deficit into three sections so that it may be dealt with over as many years, beginning this year until 2026. The state budget would take on the biggest share, according to this plan, being discussed by the energy and national economy and finance ministries.

 

Three-stage plan for public service account deficit

The public service compensation (YKO) special account’s deficit, estimated to have reached roughly 700 million euros, will be dealt with over three stages from this year until 2026, the state budget taking on the biggest share, according to a formula being discussed by the energy and national economy and finance ministries.

The plan’s first of three stages concerns an amount of about 250 million euros in debt owed to suppliers, which ministerial officials will seek to have settled this year.

If all goes according to plan, members of ESPEN, the Greek Energy Suppliers Association, should start receiving, this year, payments for public service compensation-related debt accumulated between April and November, 2023.

A second stage of the plan concerns roughly 400 million euros and will be included in the 2025 state budget.

The third stage, worth roughly 100 million euros, is planned to be offset by a surplus anticipated in 2026 as a result of the Crete-Athens grid interconnection, a project expected to be completed in 2026. It promises to greatly reduce public service compensation costs.

The overall plan is expected to turn around the public service compensation (YKO) special account’s deficit for a surplus of between 100 and 150 million euros in two years’ time.