Electricity

EFET urges Romania to scrap tax hike for electricity sector

deals

Photo: Pixabay

Published

January 14, 2019

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

January 14, 2019

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The European Federation of Energy Traders (EFET) has called on the Romanian government to urgently suspend the enforcement of the turnover tax for the electricity sector because it would lead to an unprecedented increase in turnover fees by 2,000%.

According to Romanian media, the government decision which came into effect on December 29, 2018 introduces 2% turnover tax for companies operating in the electricity and gas sector.

The EFET believes that the Emergency Government Ordinance no. 114/2018 needs to be suspended because it will bring adverse consequences for the electricity market functioning in Romania, the Romanian consumers, as well as the country’s social welfare, the EFET said in a press release.

According to the EFET, the decision adopts a principle whereby the fee to be paid in 2020 by the businesses affected is calculated retroactively on revenues from 2019, which, in turn, are mainly based on the transactions concluded in 2018.

The effects of the measures set out in the government decision, unless urgently suspended, will be devastating, the EFET said, adding that the decision is implemented without any prior stakeholder consultation or impact assessment.

These measures will also constitute a serious barrier to market entry, jeopardizing liquidity and competition, leading to an increase in both wholesale and end-consumer electricity prices, and ultimately, reducing the overall social welfare in the country, the European Federation of Energy Traders said.

Romania’s Association of Electricity Producers (AFEER) has also urged the government to scrap the new decision. It warned that this could lead to a 5% hike in end-consumers bills.

The Emergency Government Ordinance no. 114/2018 will have a major impact on companies doing business in the energy, telecom, and banking sectors, which caused complaints by domestic and foreign investors, Romanian media reported. The decision introduces new taxes for banks, as well as the provider of energy and telecom services.

The Romanian government said that this decision will improve citizens’ welfare.

Tags:
Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Establishing a Robust Transmission Grid: The Essential Role of Balkan TSOs in the Green Transition

Balkan TSOs face green transition challenge: grids must keep pace with energy shift

18 May 2026 - Investments in grids, digitalization, and energy storage are key to ensuring security of electricity supply amid rapid decarbonization, representatives of regional TSOs said at Belgrade Energy Forum (BEF 2026)

serbia eu region bef 2026 energy ministers panel cooperation western balkans

Western Balkan energy ministers: Alternative supply routes, regional cooperation are key to energy security

15 May 2026 - Energy ministers from Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia met at Belgrade Energy Forum 2026

Greece Papastavrou Serbia North Macedonia join Vertical Corridor gas interconnections

Greece’s Papastavrou: Serbia, North Macedonia to join Vertical Corridor with gas interconnections

15 May 2026 - Minister of Environment and Energy of Greece Stavros Papastavrou said the Vertical Corridor would be expanded to North Macedonia and Serbia

Emblematic Ag. Dimitrios lignite plant shuts down today in Greece

Ag. Dimitrios shutdown today leaves Greece with last coal plant

15 May 2026 - Today is the last day of operation of the Agios Dimitrios thermoelectric station, Greece's largest lignite-fired facility