Companies in the electricity  and natural gas industries will have an extra half year to prepare for new EU  transaction reporting obligations, as the European Commission is taking longer  than expected to list the formats and timetables for the data to be collected. 
  The EU  regulation on energy market integrity and transparency (REMIT) aims to 
  clamp down on market abuse, including  the placing of false orders or misleading the 
  market on available capacity (see  EDEM 29 November 2011). 
  To allow  authorities to monitor their activities for abuse, traders will have to report  their wholesale energy transactions to EU-wide body the Agency fo Cooperation  of Energy Regulators (ACER).  
  REMIT came  into force in December 2011 but regulators and EU bodies are still working to  put in place the infrastructure needed to enforce it.  
  Yet Aviv  Handler from consultancy ETR Advisory said traders have to prepare for the REMIT  reporting requirements now, calling the workload facing energy companies  “massive”. 
  ACER was  initially expected to begin collecting trade data and monitoring companies’ compliance  by this summer (see EDEM 5 October 2011). 
  But its  start date has been delayed, as the commission is taking longer than expected  to flesh out the definitions of the energy contracts to be covered by the  reporting obligations and the speed at which companies have to send their deals  information to ACER. 
  The REMIT  text states that the commission will draw up a list of the contracts,  derivatives and orders to trade that companies have to report and that it will  lay down the timing and format for the information. 
  These  definitions, to be set in implementing acts, are now not expected until the end  of the year, instead of before June. 
  The  commission has to seek feedback from ACER and energy companies throughout the  process, which has caused the delay, ICIS understands. 
  A  consultation on whether the REMIT data reporting obligations should follow  standards used in financial regulation is under way and will close on 7 May. 
  ACER will  publish some of the deal data it receives in an aggregated form on a future public  platform. Exactly what information will be made public is still undecided. 
  In a second  phase, the public platform will also show data on supply and demand 
  fundamentals. It will be drawn  primarily from the energy market transparency platforms being developed by the  EU-wide networks of electricity and gas transmission system operators, ENTSO-E  and ENSTOG. 
  “The idea is  that ACER will collect data from the transparency platforms for electricity and  gas and merge them in a wider platform, [where] trade information will be  included,” a source from ACER told ICIS. The precise timing of the project is  yet to be defined. 
  REMIT already  obliges energy companies to publish insider information before they trade.  Insider information is any data that would significantly move prices if known, according  to REMIT definitions (see EDEM 24 November 2011). 
(THE ICIS HEREN REPORTS - EDEM 17080 / 25 April 2013) |