Dall’analisi di Simone Tagliapietra, Georg Zachmann, Jeromin Zettelmeyer, Bruegel. Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Europe has taken major steps to ensure security of energy supply and help families and businesses tackle rising energy prices. Gas storage facilities have been refilled, gas and electricity demand has declined, and prices have receded from their August peaks. However, energy prices remain extremely high compared to 2021, and the EU is divided on how best to reduce prices while guarding against new disruptions. To resolve the division, it is important to understand the reasoning on either side and to adopt a mutually-satisfactory solution.
To cap or not to cap: the deal Europe needs on energy prices (bruegel.org)