2030–2035 scenario annex: Gas...

Scenario one: High volatility, tight LNG markets In a scenario characterised by global LNG...

What the European gas...

The European natural gas market has moved decisively away from its pre-2020 equilibrium....

Policy without borders: How...

Electricity market coupling is often discussed in technical or commercial terms, but its...

Fragmented convergence: Why Southeast...

For much of the past decade, the dominant assumption shaping policy and market...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeUncategorizedGreece: DESFA and...

Greece: DESFA and RAAEY disagree on Revythoussa cost coverage rate

Greek gas network operator DESFA and the Regulatory Authority for Waste, Energy and Water RAAEY, disagree on how the cost of running the transmission operator’s LNG terminal at Revythoussa should be distributed for 2025.

DESFA insists on the need to maintain a 50 percent cost coverage rate through surcharges paid by consumers, while RAEEY wants this surcharge eliminated, based on the transmission system operator’s approved Allowed Revenue plan concerning 2024 to 2027, energypress sources have informed.

RAAEY aims to approve the Revythoussa LNG facility’s new usage tariffs by July 2. These tariffs will serve as a basis for auctions concerning Revythoussa slots next year.

DESFA has submitted a related study supporting its view that the socialization rate for cost coverage of the LNG facility should remain at 50 percent.

According to RAAEY, the Revythoussa LNG facility does not face the risk of failing to fully recover its operating costs without the socialization rate.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

2030–2035 scenario annex: Gas prices, CBAM and export margins

Scenario one: High volatility, tight LNG markets In a scenario characterised by global LNG tightness, regulatory uncertainty, and persistent geopolitical risk, European gas prices remain volatile with frequent spikes. Average prices may moderate, but extreme events become more common. Under this...

Gas–power flexibility models for Serbian industries

Flexibility as a cost-control mechanism Flexibility has become the primary tool for managing gas-driven volatility. In the Serbian context, flexibility does not mean eliminating gas use but managing when and how gas and electricity are consumed. At the system level, flexibility...

Gas vs electricity procurement: Strategic choices fo Serbian exporters

Serbian exporters increasingly face a strategic choice: treat gas and electricity as separate procurement streams or integrate them into a unified energy risk strategy. The latter approach is rapidly becoming essential. Gas procurement indexed fully to TTF offers flexibility but...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!