Sweden, Finland to offer liquidity guarantees to energy firms

Published Sun, Sep 4, 2022 · 10:57 PM
    • Swedish Finance Minister Mikael Damberg says that the guarantees would last until March next year in Sweden and would also cover all Nordic and Baltic nations for the next 2 weeks only.
    • Swedish Finance Minister Mikael Damberg says that the guarantees would last until March next year in Sweden and would also cover all Nordic and Baltic nations for the next 2 weeks only. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

    DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.

    FINLAND and Sweden on Sunday (Sep 4) announced plans to offer billions of dollars in liquidity guarantees to energy companies in their countries after Russia’s Gazprom shut the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline, deepening Europe’s energy crisis.

    Finland is aiming to offer 10 billion euros (S$14 billion) and Sweden plans to offer 250 billion Swedish kronor (S$32 billion) in liquidity guarantees.

    Swedish Finance Minister Mikael Damberg on Sunday said that the guarantees would last until March next year in Sweden and would also cover all Nordic and Baltic nations for the next 2 weeks only.

    Without government guarantees, electricity producers could have ended up in “technical bankruptcy” on Monday, Damberg said.

    Lower gas flows from Russia both before and after its February invasion of Ukraine have already pushed up European prices by nearly 400 per cent over the past year, sending electricity costs soaring.

    The rapid rise in electricity prices have resulted in paper losses on electricity futures contracts of energy firms, forcing them to find funds to post additional collateral with the exchanges. REUTERS

    Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.

    Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services