On 29 April 2010, parliament adopted a majority proposal to amend the Gas Act and to withdraw the Act of 10 March 2009. This Act is published in the Moniteur belge/Belgisch Staatsblad of today.
The 2009 Act provided for a different tariff regime for transit activities compared to transport activities. Following fierce reactions from the Belgian energy legislator CREG and letters from the European Commission, parliament decided to withdraw this differentiation.
The 2010 Act also abolishes the interpretation of article 15/19, reiterating the exemption of article 32.1 of the Second Gas Directive for historical transit contracts, concluded on the basis of the Transit Directive 91/296/EEC.
Finally, the 2010 Act stipulates that the exemption for those historical contracts expires on 2 March 2011. The executive can decide on an earlier date. Given the resignation of the federal government and the upcoming elections and coalition talks, this appears unlikely.
Friday, 21 May 2010
New rules on transit of natural gas published in the Belgian official journal
Wednesday, 19 May 2010
Decision on Belgian internal burden sharing agreement postponed
The resignation of the federal government also has consequences for the agreement of the internal burden sharing agreement between the federal state and the three regions in view of reaching the EU climate targets. This decision (and the communication of this decision to the European Commission) had to be reached on 30 June 2010. The European Commission accepted a postponement until 30 December 2010.
Decision on Belgian internal burden sharing agreement postponed
Tuesday, 18 May 2010
The postponement of the nuclear phase-out postponed
Due to the resignation of the federal government the legislative decision to amend the Act of 2003 that set the phase-out of the nuclear power plants is postponed awaiting the result of the general elections on 13 June 2010. The postponement of the nuclear phase-out postponed
In October 2009, the federal government reached an agreement with GDF Suez on the postponement of the nuclear phase-out for the three eldest nuclear power plants (Doel I, Tihange I and Doel II). By way of compensation it was agreed that the nuclear operators (GDF Suez and EDF-SPE) would be a yearly contribution of 215-245 million euro until 2014. As from 2014 the yearly contribution would be set by a special follow-up committee. GDF Suez also promised to maintain employment in Belgium and to invest in renewable energy.
Earlier this year, the European Commission send a five pages long questionnaire to the Belgian government, raising substantial questions on the agreement in principle. The Belgian minister of energy responded to this questionnaire beginning of April.
Although the minister invoked a force majeure situation (insufficient production capacity if the three plants would shut down in 2015) and thus seemed to head for a prolongation of the life cycle by means of a simple royal decree, the minister clearly indicated in its response to the European Commission that the agreement in principle would have to be translated into a formal legislative text, adopted by parliament. The minister was preparing a draft text.
The resignation of the government makes that the resigning minister cannot propose such legislative text to its colleagues in the resigning government. The issue of the nuclear phase-out will be part of the negotiations in view of the formation of a new government.
Some political parties (amongst others the Flemish social-democrats and the Flemish and Walloon green parties) have indicated that they will oppose the execution of the agreement between GDF Suez and the resigning government. From their side, the nuclear sector indicated that the agreement would be binding in principle and that a new government cannot alter the principle of postponement engaged upon by the former coalation.