White Book of Reforms 2019. Chapter III. Energy Markets

White Book of Reforms 2019. Chapter III. Energy Markets

14 November 2019
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Read more at White Book of Reforms.

  • cross-subsidization (low tariffs for households, high tariffs for industrial enterprises),
  • monopolization of the sector with a weak regulator,
  • lack of measuring devices (except for electricity) in the majority of households,
  • negligible investments into infrastructure (significant energy losses on the way from producer to consumer),
  • subsidies to the chronically loss-making coal industry, and others.

Figure 1. Household and non-household electricity tariffs in selected European countries in the first half of 2018, UAH/kW-hour

Source: National Commission for Regulation of Energy and Communal Services * household tariffs include taxes; industrial tariffs exclude VAT and other refundable taxes. ** We used the exchange rate of the National Bank for the first half of 2018: 1 EUR = 32,42 UAH

[24] In Ukraine, ‘green’ tariffs are the highest in Europe which attracted much investment into the green energy facilities and provided investors with rather high profits. However, cost of green power generating facilities (e.g. solar panels) is falling dramatically. Hence, the government introduced ‘green’ auctions – an investor who wins the auction by promising the lowest green tariff is granted the right to construct a generation facility, while the government fixes this tariff for this investor for the next 20 years.

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