Electricity prices during the start: rural households benefit from strong lowering!

Electricity prices during the start: rural households benefit from strong lowering!

Electricity prices in Germany are facing a significant change. Due to a new regulation for the distribution of the electricity grid expansion, an estimated ten million households in rural regions benefit from lower energy costs in the coming year. This change affects the north, east and parts of Bavaria, while in urban centers such as Kiel and Lübeck could incur higher costs.

The energy group Eon recently announced that its subsidiaries will sometimes greatly reduce the network charges. These fees, which make up about a quarter of the electricity price, are paid to the network operators by gas and electricity suppliers and passed on to consumers. The renewed adjustments go back to developments in network operation, because around 700,000 kilometers of power lines are integrated in the Eon distribution network, which is around a third of the entire German network.

reduced network charges in detail

The reductions are remarkable: the fee for Schleswig-Holstein network is 27 percent. For the company in Brandenburg, e.DIS Netz GmbH, the reduction is 20 percent, while the Mitnetz mbH in Cottbus estimates its prices by 10 percent. In Bavaria, the remuneration structure also changes: at the Bayernwerk Netz GmbH, the renovation is 11 percent and even 27 percent in the case of lech works. These adjustments show the clear differences in the fees because there are around 800 different network operators in Germany.

In contrast, the Hessian company Syna plans an increase in fees by five percent, and Westnetz from North Rhine-Westphalia raises prices by one percent. Both companies also belong to Eon. Customers in these network areas have to expect slightly higher prices.

The background of this new regulation results from a provision of the Federal Network Agency, which wants to distribute the financial burdens of the extensive renovation of the energy laws Fairer. In particular, the networks are widely expanded where there is a high green electricity generation, often in rural regions, while the metropolitan centers move into electricity from these areas.

The new regulation for the distribution of the costs benefits the peripheral population in particular. "We want fair network charges for people and companies that in regions with a strong expansion of renewable life," explained the President of the Federal Network Agency, Klaus Müller. The new regulation is now used for the first time and is intended to reduce the economic burden on the regions that contribute a lot to generate green electricity from the previously higher network charges.

relief in the amount of two billion euros

WEMAG, a provider with functions as a network operator and supplier, has already announced that it will pass the reduction of the fees to the end users. An average household with consumption of 3,500 kilowatt hours in the coming year will pay 9.47 cents per kilowatt hour, instead of 15.5 cents - which makes a saving of around 40 percent or 211 euros per year.

Like other companies, you will also use the pressure of the competition to adapt your prices. Despite the fact that the companies are not obliged to pass on the savings in the form of lower prices directly, the market is expected to force them so as not to lose customers.

With the current adaptation, a relief volume of over two billion euros in rural areas of North and East Germany and Bavaria are promised. Müller was optimistic about the development of the fees and explained that in the past there were many of these rural households above the nationwide average prices. The competition among the energy providers will probably ensure that these savings will also arrive directly with the end customers.

consumers should therefore make sure that they can enjoy these price reductions or, if necessary, decide to change providers if the benefits do not arrive as promised. More details can be found in a detailed report in a detailed report www.nordsee-zeitung.de .

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