Wary of political fallout, France looks to limit power price surge

Reuters

Published Jan 07, 2022 11:25

PARIS (Reuters) - The French government is working on further measures to limit the surge in electricity prices, the finance minister said on Friday, wary of the political fallout three months before a presidential election.

"Look what's going on in Kazakhstan, it's quite indicative of what can happen when energy prices explode, it's politically dangerous," Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told journalists in a New Year address.

Energy prices can be sensitive topic in France. A 2018 fuel tax increase triggered months of regular violent street protests that spiralled into a broader anti-government movement.

As energy prices surged worldwide last year, the government committed to shield households by capping an increase in regulated tariffs for 2022 at only 4% in February. Since then, prices have risen further and the tax cut on power prices that was supposed to limit the increase is no longer enough.

"If we don't find a solution to the electricity prices in the days that come, the French will see at the end of January an increase of 35-40%," Le Maire said.

"There's thousands of jobs on the line. That's why we have been working night and day for the last two weeks to find a solution that guarantees the 4% power price ceiling and protects electricity intensive companies," he said.