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Greece opposes EU plan to cut gas use, plans power cuts in emergency

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A coal-fired power plant is seen near the open-pit mine field in Megalopolis, Greece June 9, 2022. Picture taken with a drone. REUTERS/Vassilis Triandafyllou

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ATHENS, July 21 (Reuters) – Greece opposes an EU plan for countries to cut their gas use by 15% by March, a government spokesman said on Thursday, after the country unveiled a contingency plan which sees rotating power outages as a last resort if Russian gas supplies are disrupted.

The European Commission on Wednesday proposed a voluntary target for all EU countries to cut gas use by 15% from August to March, compared with their average consumption in the same period during 2016-2021. read more

“The Greek government does not agree in principle with the EU proposal for a 15% reduction in gas usage”, government spokesman Giannis Oikonomou said.

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“We have submitted a series of proposals regarding gas prices …. and gas supply and we will insist on supporting them as a European solution,” he said.

Greece has proposed an EU cap mechanism on wholesale electricity prices and joint gas purchases to help cut soaring energy costs.

Spain has also said that it could not support the EU proposal without consultations. read more

Greece relies on Russian pipeline gas for 40% of its gas needs and has not seen any disruption of supplies so far. It has replaced a big chunk of the Russian fuel with liquefied gas (LNG) imported from the United States and other countries.

Under a draft contingency plan which was unveiled on Thursday, the country plans to implement rotating power outages as a last resort if Russian gas supplies are disrupted.

These emergency measures will be activated only if other actions, including ramping up coal-fired power capacity, asking consumers to reduce power consumption at peak hours and stopping power exports, prove insufficient, its energy regulator said.

Under European Union guidelines, ahead of the winter, Greece would also need to store enough gas in other states to cover 15% – 900 million cubic metres – of its annual use, as it has no gas storage facilities. read more

Athens has been in talks with Italy on whether it can store gas there ahead of the winter and in talks with the European Commission on whether it can store a smaller quantity in Italy, according to a government source.

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Reporting by Angeliki Koutantou; Additional reporting by Renee Maltezou; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Bernadette Baum

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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