The Prague Post - Left out in the cold by Spain's soaring energy prices

EUR -
AED 4.264941
AFN 77.072604
ALL 96.633265
AMD 444.21501
ANG 2.07874
AOA 1064.929487
ARS 1722.229122
AUD 1.786508
AWG 2.093278
AZN 1.973488
BAM 1.955866
BBD 2.339079
BDT 142.294196
BGN 1.955775
BHD 0.437809
BIF 3424.0157
BMD 1.161319
BND 1.509551
BOB 8.024271
BRL 6.257073
BSD 1.161339
BTN 101.902443
BWP 16.58056
BYN 3.957934
BYR 22761.857137
BZD 2.335679
CAD 1.628751
CDF 2566.515614
CHF 0.924756
CLF 0.027978
CLP 1097.559149
CNY 8.276084
CNH 8.2748
COP 4514.047892
CRC 583.219707
CUC 1.161319
CUP 30.77496
CVE 110.268251
CZK 24.333093
DJF 206.806988
DKK 7.469791
DOP 74.402514
DZD 151.074842
EGP 55.276593
ERN 17.419789
ETB 177.771107
FJD 2.640666
FKP 0.871731
GBP 0.87272
GEL 3.153022
GGP 0.871731
GHS 12.542424
GIP 0.871731
GMD 84.197175
GNF 10080.297219
GTQ 8.895301
GYD 242.96821
HKD 9.023108
HNL 30.518031
HRK 7.534288
HTG 152.075139
HUF 389.508218
IDR 19288.815813
ILS 3.819312
IMP 0.871731
INR 101.9636
IQD 1521.351407
IRR 48833.474493
ISK 142.38907
JEP 0.871731
JMD 186.226293
JOD 0.823376
JPY 177.551192
KES 149.949912
KGS 101.55695
KHR 4678.158078
KMF 493.561106
KPW 1045.20936
KRW 1671.620355
KWD 0.356153
KYD 0.967833
KZT 625.31113
LAK 25216.852093
LBP 103996.814116
LKR 352.691918
LRD 212.527181
LSL 20.152581
LTL 3.429074
LVL 0.70247
LYD 6.316213
MAD 10.718162
MDL 19.881672
MGA 5248.177339
MKD 61.622082
MMK 2438.285791
MNT 4177.07532
MOP 9.294514
MRU 46.536572
MUR 52.863064
MVR 17.779659
MWK 2013.768046
MXN 21.37112
MYR 4.904204
MZN 74.220102
NAD 20.152581
NGN 1696.989326
NIO 42.741444
NOK 11.618389
NPR 163.043509
NZD 2.022031
OMR 0.446517
PAB 1.161339
PEN 3.943333
PGK 4.960168
PHP 68.080603
PKR 329.003917
PLN 4.240911
PYG 8217.277667
QAR 4.244625
RON 5.082627
RSD 117.244452
RUB 93.775716
RWF 1686.25698
SAR 4.355128
SBD 9.550484
SCR 16.121658
SDG 698.528585
SEK 10.904561
SGD 1.509105
SHP 0.87129
SLE 26.919619
SLL 24352.283292
SOS 663.722428
SRD 46.102627
STD 24036.963609
STN 24.500828
SVC 10.1613
SYP 12840.87233
SZL 20.149681
THB 38.030911
TJS 10.829366
TMT 4.064617
TND 3.412915
TOP 2.719928
TRY 48.702128
TTD 7.883266
TWD 35.811367
TZS 2893.130774
UAH 48.83965
UGX 4041.136552
USD 1.161319
UYU 46.321565
UZS 14086.475991
VES 246.453004
VND 30548.502653
VUV 141.510065
WST 3.259415
XAF 655.979166
XAG 0.024105
XAU 0.000286
XCD 3.138524
XCG 2.092971
XDR 0.815455
XOF 655.976342
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.497274
ZAR 20.130923
ZMK 10453.258115
ZMW 25.635866
ZWL 373.944322
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    79.09

    0%

  • VOD

    -0.0800

    11.66

    -0.69%

  • CMSC

    0.0550

    24.19

    +0.23%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.75

    -0.34%

  • NGG

    -0.2000

    76.7

    -0.26%

  • RIO

    0.8600

    70.62

    +1.22%

  • GSK

    1.2800

    45.54

    +2.81%

  • CMSD

    0.2300

    24.7

    +0.93%

  • RELX

    -0.8500

    45.95

    -1.85%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    16.74

    +0.66%

  • BCC

    0.9900

    71.97

    +1.38%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    23.86

    -0.75%

  • BTI

    0.7100

    51.85

    +1.37%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.95

    +0.14%

  • AZN

    -0.0300

    83.4

    -0.04%

  • BP

    0.6800

    35

    +1.94%

Left out in the cold by Spain's soaring energy prices
Left out in the cold by Spain's soaring energy prices

Left out in the cold by Spain's soaring energy prices

In her flat on the outskirts of Madrid, Pamela Ponce no longer turns on the heating despite the biting chill coming in through the windows.

Text size:

"The prices have gone up a lot, I have no choice," sighs Ponce, a young Peruvian mother, her voice resigned.

On this bitterly cold January morning, the temperature outside is hovering around five degrees Celsius (41 degrees Fahrenheit). And inside, it's barely much warmer.

"It can also be very cold inside, above all when there's no sun," she says, walking through the three rooms where she lives with her mother and two children in Leganes.

This 32-year-old says she hasn't been able to pay her electricity bills for the past three months with prices in Spain soaring by a staggering 72 percent over the last year, one of the highest increases within the European Union.

The hike has been in part driven by Spain's excessive dependence on gas to produce electricity and the lack of a major power provider like in many other countries to help keep prices in check through reduced tariffs.

"Before I was paying between 35 and 60 euros a month but now, it's more than 100 euros, without even mentioning gas which has also gone up," explains Ponce, who hasn't worked since catching Covid which left her with severe after-effects, notably affecting her left hand.

"I just don't know what to do," says the former cleaning lady who admits she's reliant upon her ex-partner to pay the rent and buy food.

"I feel like I'm drowning," she whispers, her voice choked with emotion.

In an attempt to heat the flat, she has bought a heater that runs off a gas bottle which she moves from room to room depending on what they need.

"It's cheaper," she says. But everything else is strictly rationed.

"My kids only take a shower every other day (and) I generally cook for 2 or 3 days at a time so I don't have to turn the cooker on so much," she explains.

- More and more families affected -

And there are countless others like her.

"More and more families are struggling to pay their bills" and "have to chose between paying for food or light at the end of the month," says Sara Casas, head of environmental issues at the Spanish Red Cross.

Last year, Spain's left-wing government announced a series of tax cuts to try and bring down household bills but even this has not compensated for the huge rise in prices.

According to the UOC, Spain's largest consumer organisation, the average annual home electricity bill in Spain has risen from 675 euros in 2020 to 949 euros in 2021, a rise of 41 percent.

The previous record jump, in 2018, was 18 percent.

Vulnerable people, such as "single mums with children, older people with a low income and migrants" are particularly badly hit because many "struggle to get benefits because there's a lot of red tape and you have to bring in a lot of paperwork," says Casas.

- Layering up, homemade heaters -

According to an awareness campaign being run by Medicos del Mundo, some 6.8 million of Spain's 47 million residents are suffering to one degree or another from "energy poverty".

Such a situation brings with it "a higher risk of suffering from chronic bronchitis, depression and anxiety," the NGO says.

One of those struggling is Raul, a 55-year-old computer technician who lives with his wife, daughter and 82-year-old mother-in-law in the northwestern city of A Coruna.

"Whenever we turn something on, we have to think about how much the bill will go up," says Raul who hasn't worked since suffering a stroke in March 2021, with the family living off his wife's salary.

"My neurologist told me I should avoid stress but it's very difficult when you don't know if you're going to be able to pay next month's bills," he says, admitting they have barely switched on the heating this winter, despite the cold and the humidity.

"We bought a heated blanket for my mother-in-law" and "inside the house, I always wear lots of jumpers or coats," he says.

He has also been trying to cobble together a home-made heater.

"It's a temporary solution," shrugs Raul, who says he is keeping his fingers crossed "that the prices will eventually come down".

K.Dudek--TPP