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-   -   Utilities in Hungary (https://britishexpats.com/forum/hungary-140/utilities-hungary-944046/)

klarika May 20th 2022 2:35 pm

Utilities in Hungary
 
As we have had huge utilities price leaps in the Uk just wondered if people still find utilities Gas / Electricity cheaper in Hungary?

Peter_in_Hungary May 21st 2022 12:14 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
Hungary still has one of the cheapest gas and electricity prices in the EU because the government has a fairly aggressive price cap on domestic prices however when these prices are set against the average wage then the picture is not so good. There is also a price cap on some groceries e.g. cooking oil, white flour and granulated white sugar. Whilst useful I question the health implications of price capping white sugar and white flour.

With regard to gas V.Orban some time back did a long term deal with Russia which fixed a (now very) low price which so far Russia seems to be holding to its contract which means that Hungary is a bit insulated from the recent dramatic increases. The implications for the Hungarian economy would be severe if the EU enforced a ban on Russian gas without supporting some sort of alternative. Hungary also has an oil refinery that refines mostly Russian oil and would require a major refit to refine other oil.

Sachina May 21st 2022 2:00 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 

Originally Posted by Peter_in_Hungary (Post 13116562)
Hungary still has one of the cheapest gas and electricity prices in the EU because the government has a fairly aggressive price cap on domestic prices however when these prices are set against the average wage then the picture is not so good. There is also a price cap on some groceries e.g. cooking oil, white flour and granulated white sugar. Whilst useful I question the health implications of price capping white sugar and white flour.

With regard to gas V.Orban some time back did a long term deal with Russia which fixed a (now very) low price which so far Russia seems to be holding to its contract which means that Hungary is a bit insulated from the recent dramatic increases. The implications for the Hungarian economy would be severe if the EU enforced a ban on Russian gas without supporting some sort of alternative. Hungary also has an oil refinery that refines mostly Russian oil and would require a major refit to refine other oil.

I saw this article in the Financial Times about MOL's plans for the future

https://www.ft.com/content/87308996-...d-7c69cc019e8c

Hungary’s MOL prepares to move away from Russian oil





Peter_in_Hungary May 22nd 2022 4:37 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
The problem with moving away from Russian oil is that the refinery will need a major refit
Quote
https://hungarytoday.hu/mol-immediat...pply-problems/
It would take hundreds of millions of dollars in investments and several years for MOL Plc. to completely switch from Russian oil to other types, the Hungarian oil company said in a statement, adding that they are still investigating exactly what investments would be needed.
End quote
Which is one of the reasons why Hungary is against a ban on Russian oil in the short term.

The war in Ukraine looks likely to speed up considerably the move to renewables in Europe e.g
https://www.euractiv.com/section/ene...mps-mandatory/
The Dutch government intends to ban new fossil fuel-centric heating system installations as of 2026, while introducing the mandatory use of heat pumps or connections to heat networks.

However many countries including Hungary are or will suffer from electric grid capacity in the rush to renewable electricity. Hungary has already evidenced this with the reduction of solar panels allowed on houses with a single phase supply from the previous 5kWp to now 2.5kWp

wolfi May 23rd 2022 7:26 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
There is also a price cap on some groceries e.g. cooking oil, white flour and granulated white sugar.
The effect of this is that neither our Lidl nor the Tesco had sugar and sunflower oil for several days!
And now Lidl has limited buying, max 2 kilos.

Jack_Russells4ever May 23rd 2022 7:56 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 

Originally Posted by wolfi (Post 13117054)
There is also a price cap on some groceries e.g. cooking oil, white flour and granulated white sugar.
The effect of this is that neither our Lidl nor the Tesco had sugar and sunflower oil for several days!
And now Lidl has limited buying, max 2 kilos.

Tesco is limiting white flour to (1) per day and Sugar to (2)

Pulaski May 23rd 2022 9:57 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 

Originally Posted by wolfi (Post 13117054)
There is also a price cap on some groceries e.g. cooking oil, white flour and granulated white sugar.
The effect of this is that neither our Lidl nor the Tesco had sugar and sunflower oil for several days!
And now Lidl has limited buying, max 2 kilos.

So enforcing a price cap which requires sellers to sell below market price depresses supply while simultaneously stimulating demand? πŸ˜•

Hmm, I didn't see that coming! 😲

Perhaps I'd understand if I hadn't skipped the Economics 101 course. πŸ™„

xavierx May 27th 2022 12:05 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 

Originally Posted by wolfi (Post 13117054)
There is also a price cap on some groceries e.g. cooking oil, white flour and granulated white sugar.
The effect of this is that neither our Lidl nor the Tesco had sugar and sunflower oil for several days!
And now Lidl has limited buying, max 2 kilos.

I don't think this is being caused by price caps, there has been zero sunflower oil in the UK (as is the case in most of Europe right now) for months. After 6 weeks of searching I managed to get some low end vegetable oil that was in stock in one Aldi in my area

scrubbedexpat142 May 27th 2022 1:00 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
We must be hogging all the sunflower oil, plenty around here yesterday.

Sachina May 27th 2022 1:44 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 

Originally Posted by Expatrick (Post 13118012)
We must be hogging all the sunflower oil, plenty around here yesterday.

I've had no problem either. And no limits on the amount of flour or sugar either

xavierx May 27th 2022 3:33 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
Sounds like you are doing better than the UK then, Germany is even worse, people are selling it on ebay for up to Β£20 a litre as people are desperate to buy it given how long its been unavailable in some regions

scrubbedexpat142 May 27th 2022 3:42 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
Maybe Sachina & I should hire a van & do a sunflower run to Germany!

Peter_in_Hungary May 27th 2022 4:41 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 

Originally Posted by Expatrick (Post 13118066)
Maybe Sachina & I should hire a van & do a sunflower run to Germany!

That is why some supermarkets have a limit

scrubbedexpat142 May 27th 2022 4:59 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
We're going to have to go to a lot of supermarkets!

Haven't seen any signs, yet, in our local supermarkets.
​​​​​​

Peter_in_Hungary May 29th 2022 4:38 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
A bit more on price caps, as of Friday (27th) the price of petrol and diesel will be shown at about 700huf/ltr. the "proper" market price. This is what will be paid by all non Hungarian registered cars. Hungarian cars will be charged at the subsidised rate (480huf) at the checkout. This is to stop fuel tourists coming in from neighbouring countries to benefit from the Hungarian (tax payers) subsidies.
I'm not sure what the EU will make of this apparent discrimination. (e.g. EU pensioners benefit from free travel in Hungary and not to give this would be discrimination under EU regs.).

wolfi May 29th 2022 4:58 pm

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
That price discrimination might make EU tourists consider where to go on holiday.
My wife's young ones told me that again Croatia is cheaper than Hungary - they were even thinking of spendin a long weekend there instead of Tatra Mountains.
So what about Austrians, Germans etc?
And don't even think about Russian tourists ...

Sachina May 30th 2022 6:34 am

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 

Originally Posted by wolfi (Post 13118485)
That price discrimination might make EU tourists consider where to go on holiday.
My wife's young ones told me that again Croatia is cheaper than Hungary - they were even thinking of spendin a long weekend there instead of Tatra Mountains.
So what about Austrians, Germans etc?
And don't even think about Russian tourists ...

If the chart posted below is accurate, even at 700HUF a litre or $1.91 (today's exchange rate) petrol prices here are comparable to the price in countries such as Croatia and Austria. France and Spain for example are paying $2.07 (757.31HUF) per litre. In Germany people are paying $2.42 which is 820.20HUF ... quite a difference!

https://www.globalpetrolprices.com/g...prices/Europe/



xavierx May 30th 2022 7:45 am

Re: Utilities in Hungary
 
I paid Β£1.76 (812huf) to fill my car 2 days ago in the UK
I've seen diesel up to Β£1.98 (914huf)

So paying 700 huf (or whatever) on my next visit is still a bargain


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