SOCAR and Snam demand high dividend from DESFA
For the time being, the Greek state will hold the remaining 34 percent.
In talks last week between Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s adviser Dimitris Liakos and representatives of Snam and Socar, the final details were agreed on the basis of the new approach of the three sides in the wake of Tsipras’s meeting with Socar chief executive Rovnag Abdullayev.
The basis of the three-party agreement is DESFA’s revised gas tariffs, which have been approved by Greece’s Regulatory Authority for Energy (RAE), with the key points being retrievable amounts in terms of debts to the company created during the period from 2006 to 2015, the time of their recovery, the increase in the gas network’s usage fees, and DESFA’s returns.
RAE has raised the retrievable amounts for 2006-15, as well as incorporated those for 2016, from 285 million euros (which the Energy Ministry’s law amendment had provided for) to 326 million euros while reducing their recovery time from 40 to 20 years. Based on those two changes, the increase in the final cost of the network’s usage fees will amount to 36 percent, against 23 percent that the original plan had provided for according to the ministry’s amendment. The final price of natural gas for industrial use is expected to rise by 2.5-4 percent, depending on the client’s consumption profile.
One of the issues still being discussed by the three sides is the dividend each will get from DESFA’s earnings. The Azeri and Italian companies have demanded that they secure high dividends via an agreement, sidestepping the corporate law that allows for zero dividends.