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SWEDEN TO HELP HOUSEHOLDS AS ELECTRICITY PRICES SOAR

Sweden's government says it has earmarked some 6 billion kronor ($661 million)
for a temporary scheme to help the most affected households across the
Scandinavian country cope with high electricity bills this winter

By DAVID KEYTON Associated Press
12 January 2022, 17:47
• 3 min read
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The Associated Press
Power lines stand out outside Enkoping, Sweden on March 16, 2018. Sweden's
governm...Read MoreRead More

STOCKHOLM -- Sweden announced Wednesday it had earmarked some 6 billion kronor
($661 million) for a temporary scheme to help the most affected households
across the Scandinavian country to cope with high electricity bills this winter.

Households consuming more than 2,000 kilowatt hours per month can get
compensation worth about 2,000 kronor ($220) per month for the three months
December-February. Some 1.8 million households are affected, the government
said.



“This is an exceptional measure in an exceptional situation, it is unusual to go
in with support when prices fluctuate in markets,” said Finance Minister Mikkel
Damberg.

Sweden's one-party, minority Social Democratic government is expected to get
majority backing for the plan in the 349-seat Riksdag.

Home owners in Sweden have already started adopting strategies to lower their
consumption — turning down the heating, closing off rooms, using alternative
heat sources like wood log burners and wearing thick woolly socks.

“It’s a crazy situation to be in,” said Hannah Hall who lives in an old wooden
house in Kristinehamn, a small town in central Sweden. “I was aware it would be
an expensive winter, but it feels unprecedented.”

Hall was billed 10,400 kronor ($1,150) for her December electricity consumption,
about tripled the previous year, to heat her 130 square meter (1,400 square
feet) home.

Her family also use log burners as backup heating to keep the living room cozy,
but “wood is running out in our shed, and all the farmers have run out of wood"
to sell as people seek to diversify their heating source.



The fact that Hall has been working from home because of the pandemic has added
to their heating requirements. Thick woolly socks meant as a fun gift by her
employer as her company shifted to work-from-home have come in handy and her
husband has stopped using their small outhouse as a home office to avoid turning
on the extra heater.

“We’re in a lucky financial situation … but other people, it must be really
tough and a big worry,” she said, adding they use 23,000 kilowatt hours of
electricity per year.

There have been reports of people taking bank loans to be able to pay their
electricity bill.

“I understand that people are worried about their finances,” Sweden’s Energy
Minister Khashayar Farmanbar said.

Sweden’s electricity prices have risen as cold temperatures increased demand and
gas prices in Europe continue to rise.

According to data from the Swedish energy market regulator, the electricity
costs for an average apartment in the southern half of the country where a large
majority of Swedes live increased by 266% year-on-year in December, while the
cost for an average house with electric heating jumped an average of 361% over
the same period.

“Of course, energy companies could do better at informing their customers” said
Jens Lundgren, the regulator's deputy chief economist, but he believes consumers
could do more to mitigate costs by “investing time in understanding the energy
market and the potential cost savings that come from using smart energy
saving-products available,” such as heat-pumps, smart EV-chargers or timers that
only power appliances when electricity prices are lower.

In December, neighboring Norway said support will be available to households
that use up to 5,000 kilowatt hours of electricity each month. The move will
cost the nation about 5 billion kroner ($567 million).

“We have focused on helping as many people as possible," Finance Minister Trygve
Slagsvold Vedum said in December. "We hope that these measures will provide a
little more breathing space.”

———

Associated Press writer Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Denmark, contributed.

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