ANALYSIS OF COMPETITION ON THE EUROPEAN NATURAL GAS MARKET

This article addresses aspects of competition in the European gas market and more precisely analyzes the abuse of Gazprom's dominant position by preventing the free flow of gas among the Member States of the European Union and by its unfair prices. In line with the European principle of freedom...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mihaela IONESCU SAS
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Romanian Foundation for Business Intelligence 2018-12-01
Series:SEA: Practical Application of Science
Subjects:
Online Access: http://seaopenresearch.eu/Journals/articles/SPAS_18_3.pdf
id doaj-7dc87d13172348faa188766d514064f6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7dc87d13172348faa188766d514064f62020-11-24T20:42:56ZengRomanian Foundation for Business IntelligenceSEA: Practical Application of Science2360-25542018-12-01VI18 (3/2018)263267seapas:y:2018:i:18:p:263-267ANALYSIS OF COMPETITION ON THE EUROPEAN NATURAL GAS MARKETMihaela IONESCU SAS0 Doctoral School of Social Sciences, Department of Economics, University of Oradea, Romania This article addresses aspects of competition in the European gas market and more precisely analyzes the abuse of Gazprom's dominant position by preventing the free flow of gas among the Member States of the European Union and by its unfair prices. In line with the European principle of freedom of movement for goods, services, persons and capital, the European Commission adopted three directives, approved in 1998, 2003 and 2009, by introducing competition on a market which had been closed down until then. From a macroeconomic perspective, there has been significant theoretical and empirical evidence suggesting that the liberalization of the European gas market has positive effects on the energy industry in terms of lower prices and security of supply. But the competition law in the European energy sector is not always properly applied and consumers are discouraged in terms of implementing the legislative and regulatory framework. In accordance with art. 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), EU countries importing natural gas must benefit from transparent, fair pricing contracts. However, in some cases, abusive practices have been used for gas importers in central and Eastern Europe. http://seaopenresearch.eu/Journals/articles/SPAS_18_3.pdf Abuse of dominant positionCompetitionNatural gas marketRegulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mihaela IONESCU SAS
spellingShingle Mihaela IONESCU SAS
ANALYSIS OF COMPETITION ON THE EUROPEAN NATURAL GAS MARKET
SEA: Practical Application of Science
Abuse of dominant position
Competition
Natural gas market
Regulation
author_facet Mihaela IONESCU SAS
author_sort Mihaela IONESCU SAS
title ANALYSIS OF COMPETITION ON THE EUROPEAN NATURAL GAS MARKET
title_short ANALYSIS OF COMPETITION ON THE EUROPEAN NATURAL GAS MARKET
title_full ANALYSIS OF COMPETITION ON THE EUROPEAN NATURAL GAS MARKET
title_fullStr ANALYSIS OF COMPETITION ON THE EUROPEAN NATURAL GAS MARKET
title_full_unstemmed ANALYSIS OF COMPETITION ON THE EUROPEAN NATURAL GAS MARKET
title_sort analysis of competition on the european natural gas market
publisher Romanian Foundation for Business Intelligence
series SEA: Practical Application of Science
issn 2360-2554
publishDate 2018-12-01
description This article addresses aspects of competition in the European gas market and more precisely analyzes the abuse of Gazprom's dominant position by preventing the free flow of gas among the Member States of the European Union and by its unfair prices. In line with the European principle of freedom of movement for goods, services, persons and capital, the European Commission adopted three directives, approved in 1998, 2003 and 2009, by introducing competition on a market which had been closed down until then. From a macroeconomic perspective, there has been significant theoretical and empirical evidence suggesting that the liberalization of the European gas market has positive effects on the energy industry in terms of lower prices and security of supply. But the competition law in the European energy sector is not always properly applied and consumers are discouraged in terms of implementing the legislative and regulatory framework. In accordance with art. 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), EU countries importing natural gas must benefit from transparent, fair pricing contracts. However, in some cases, abusive practices have been used for gas importers in central and Eastern Europe.
topic Abuse of dominant position
Competition
Natural gas market
Regulation
url http://seaopenresearch.eu/Journals/articles/SPAS_18_3.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT mihaelaionescusas analysisofcompetitionontheeuropeannaturalgasmarket
_version_ 1716821169680678912