Household Energy Price Index for Europe June 26th, 2015 June Prices Just Released The most up-to-date picture of European household electricity and gas prices: VaasaETT and two leading European energy market authorities collaborate to track monthly energy prices in 23 European countries In This Month’s Edition European energy price development The values of both HEPI indexes remained stable this month again at a high level. The price of electricity (including network charges but excluding taxes) went up by 1 index point compared to last month whilst the price of gas remained perfectly stable. (Figures 1 and 2.) Residential electricity prices Figure 3 shows the end-user price of electricity in 23 European capital cities as of June 1st 2015. It shows that depending on where a customer lives in the EU, the price that customer has to pay per kWh of electricity can vary by as much as 147%. If we include Belgrade, the price varies by a staggering ratio of 5.1. Household customers in Copenhagen and (since January 2013) Berlin pay by far the highest prices in Europe (though the price of energy represents only a small portion of the total price, the 1 HEPI price trend – European energy prices stable around their all-time high; Gas price in Greece continue to decrease; Energy Price breakdown – Market forces represent less than half of the energy bill. lion’s share being tax, in fact), while inhabitants of Belgrade pay the least followed by inhabitants of Budapest. When adjusted to purchasing power in each country1, most central and eastern European countries end up with prices which are above the European average (Figure 4). Prague overtakes Copenhagen as the place with the most expensive electricity followed by Lisbon and Berlin. On the other end of the spectrum, Helsinki has the cheapest electricity at PPS followed by Belgrade and Luxembourg. Residential gas prices Figure 5 shows the end-user price of natural gas in 22 European capital cities as of June 1st 20152. The highest price by very far is paid by inhabitants of Stockholm (nearly twice as much as the second most expensive city for gas). This can be explained by the small size the market; there are only 33,000 household gas customers in the whole of Sweden3. Not accounting for Stockholm, Copenhagen becomes the most expensive city for gas where prices are 3.4 times as high as in Bucharest, the cheapest city for gas. Gas prices in Athens continue to drop – - 2.8% this month compared to last. Enduser prices in Madrid increased by 2.9%; no other changes greater than 1% took place. Prices at PPS (and ignoring Stockholm) offer a very different outcome. Lisbon has the highest adjusted price followed by Belgrade, while Luxembourg, London and Bucharest have Europe’s lowest adjusted prices for gas. (Figure 6.) Energy price breakdown The breakdown of end-user energy prices into four components (energy, distribution, energy taxes and VAT) also shows major variations. (Figures 7 and 8.) Our survey shows that on average, the energy price component (including retail 1 PPS is an artificial common reference currency unit that eliminates price level differences between countries. One PPS thus buys the same given volume of goods and services in all countries. It is developed by Eurostat to accurately compare prices across Europe. 2 Please note that Helsinki has been left out of this analysis on gas prices as there is virtually no residential gas market in Finland. 3 The Swedish electricity and natural gas markets 2013 (2014: 51). 2 margins) represents about 38% of the end-user price of electricity, distribution 34%, energy taxes 13% and VAT 16%, while energy (including retail margins) represents 52% of the end-user price of natural gas, distribution 25%, energy taxes 8% and VAT 15%. Copenhagen is a very unusual case; the cost of energy as a commodity represents just over 10% of the end-user electricity price, by far the lowest of all surveyed cities, whereas the energy taxes represent an astonishing 48% (over three times Europe’s average) and 68% if we include VAT. A similar (albeit to a lesser extend) case is Berlin where since the introduction of the Energiewende, the energy tax component represents 30% of the end-user price of electricity. Overall, the results show that market forces represent only about half of the enduser price (both for electricity and gas) whereas national fiscal and regulatory elements are responsible for the other half through distribution tariffs, energy taxes and VAT. 3 Figure 1. Evolution of residential energy and distribution prices excluding taxes in the EU-15 Figure 2. Evolution of residential energy and distribution prices excluding taxes in the EU-22 4 Figure 3. Residential electricity prices including taxes (June 2015) 35 30.62 30 29.34 24.77 25 22.65 22.63 c€ per kWh 21.32 19.68 19.45 20 18.87 18.76 18.75 18.28 18.22 18.08 17.96 16.23 15 15.38 14.76 14.54 13.42 13.32 13.28 12.4 10 5.96 5 Source: HEPI by Energie-Control Austria, MEKH and VaasaETT Ltd. © 2015 VaasaETT Ltd. 0 End-user electricity price (June 2015) Figure 4. Residential electricity prices including taxes at PPS (June 2015) 30 25 15 29.13 29.09 28.15 27.69 25.88 25.85 22.74 22.16 21.98 10 5 21.5 21.08 20.35 19.27 20.68 18.68 18.19 18.02 17.6 16.57 16.36 16.29 15.83 12.62 10.68 Source: HEPI by Energie-Control Austria, MEKH and VaasaETT Ltd. 5 Average Helsinki (FI) Belgrade (RS) Brussels (BE) Paris (FR) Luxembourg City (LU) End-user electricity price at PPS (June 2015) London (GB) Vienna (AT) Amsterdam (NL) Ljubljana (SI) Rome (IT) Stockholm (SE) Dublin (IE) Zagreb (HR) Budapest (HU) Athens (GR) Bratislava (SK) Copenhagen (DK) Bucharest (RO) Warsaw (PL) Madrid (ES) Berlin (DE) Lisbon (PT) 0 Prague (CZ) c€ per kWh 20 Figure 5. Residential gas prices including taxes (June 2015) 20.88 20 c€ per kWh 15 9.68 9.61 10 8.26 7.41 7.25 7.23 7.03 6.9 6.9 6.83 6.8 6.28 6.19 7.06 5.6 5.4 5 5.37 5.32 5.06 4.94 3.42 Source: HEPI by Energie-Control Austria, MEKH and VaasaETT Ltd. © 2015 VaasaETT Ltd. 2.86 0 End-user natural gas price (June 2015) Figure 6. Residential gas prices including taxes at PPS (June 2015) 16 14 c€ per kWh 12 10 8 6 4 2 16.37 12.35 10.81 9.07 8.96 8.7 8.22 8.1 7.94 7.86 7.58 7.19 6.94 6.71 6.31 Source: HEPI by Energie-Control Austria, MEKH and VaasaETT Ltd. © 2015 VaasaETT Ltd. 0 End-user gas price at PPS (June 2015) 6 7.83 6.2 6.2 5.93 5.58 5.54 5.26 4.51 Figure 7. Residential electricity price breakdown (June 2015) 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 5% 6% 7% 9% 11% 16% 17% 12% 19% 14% 17% 16% 17% 7% 20% 19% 17% 18% 20% 19% 19% 21% 17% 11% 17% 6% 16% 0% 1% 1% 4% 3% 20% 10% 13% 18% 11% 3% 10% 30% 15% 24% 24% 17% 19% 30% 29% 45% 33% 16% 32% 37% 47% 50% 39% 48% 52% 49% 34% 30% 36% 30% 42% 15% 25% 42% 30% 19% 29% 20% 40% 30% 20% 10% 60% 53% 21% 36% 30% 37% 29% 11% 45% 38% 41% 44% 33% 35% 28% 37% 31% 35% 38% 31% Source: HEPI by Energie-Control Austria, MEKH and VaasaETT Ltd. © 2015 VaasaETT Ltd. 53% 42% 45% 38% 31% 0% Energy Distribution Energy Taxes VAT Figure 8. Residential gas price breakdown (June 2015) 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 5% 6% 7% 9% 12% 17% 3% 14% 11% 4% 15% 16% 16% 17% 17% 17% 19% 20% 18% 17% 17% 20% 20% 21% 19% 5% 13% 10% 0% 21% 7% 0% 3% 8% 9% 23% 12% 9% 10% 29% 21% 19% 16% 23% 16% 26% 31% 21% 24% 31% 28% 25% 17% 32% 33% 38% 27% 26% 37% 11% 25% 34% 63% 22% 72% 30% 57% 20% 10% 30% 26% 37% 38% 45% 46% 51% 42% 46% 55% 61% 78% 53% 67% 45% 59% 58% 64% 52% 52% Source: HEPI by Energie-Control Austria, MEKH and VaasaETT Ltd. © 2015 VaasaETT Ltd. 0% Energy Distribution Energy Taxes VAT Visit our project webpage at www.energypriceindex.com and subscribe to the free monthly update of the HEPI index for Europe. 7 For More Information Christophe Dromacque HEPI Project Manager Office: +358 (0)9 4159 0344 Mobile: +358 (0) 44 906 6822 Email: [email protected] (English / French) Anna Bogacka Analyst Office: +358 (0)9 4159 0344 Mobile: +358 (0) 44 906 6823 Email: [email protected] (English / Russian) Silke Ebnet Regulation and Competition Office: +43 (1) 24724 715 Email: [email protected] (English / German) László Szabó Head of Unit Department of Market Monitoring Email: [email protected] (English / Hungarian) 8 About the Authors Energie-Control Austria Energie-Control Austria was set up by the legislator on the basis of the new Energy Liberalisation Act and commenced operation on 1 March 2001. Energie-Control is headed by Mr. Walter Boltz and Mr. Martin Graf as managing directors and is entrusted with monitoring, supporting and, where necessary, regulating the implementation of the liberalisation of the Austrian electricity and natural gas markets. More at: www.e-control.at The Hungarian Energy and Public Utility Regulatory Authority The main responsibilities of the Hungarian Energy and Public Utility Regulatory Authority are consumer protection, providing regulated access to networks and systems, carrying out regulatory competencies in order to maintain security of supply and fostering competition. The scope of the infrastructures, which have to be overseen by the Hungarian Energy and Public Utility Regulatory Authority has been extended in 2011 with the complete regulation of district heating and in 2012 with the water public utilities. As market progresses are becoming more widespread, we put emphasis on our market monitoring task and we pay specific attention to regional market integration both in electricity and natural gas. More at: www.mekh.hu VaasaETT Global Energy Think Tank VaasaETT is a research and advisory consultancy dedicated to customer related issues in the energy industry. VaasaETT advises its clients based on empirical evidence brought about from extensive research in the area of customer behavior and competitive market behavior (including smart energy offerings, demand response, energy efficiency, smart home, smart grid). VaasaETT’s unique collaborative approach enables it to draw on an extensive network of several thousand energy practitioners around the world who can contribute to its research activities or take part in industry events it organizes allowing VaasaETT to integrate global knowledge and global best practice into its areas of expertise. VaasaETT’s truly global focus is reflected by research and strategic support having been provided to a diverse array of organizations on 5 continents including for instance 28 of the Fortune Global 500 companies, the European Commission, Government and public research bodies in Europe, Japan, the UAE, the Middle East and Australia. More at: www.vaasaett.com 9
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