Brussels warns Spain that cutting fuel VAT to 10% breaches EU rules

The European Commission has warned Spain that reducing VAT on fuels from 21% to 10% violates the EU VAT directive. The Spanish government defends the measure as temporary to ease energy price hikes due to the war in the Middle East. Brussels recommends cutting special taxes on hydrocarbons instead.

The European Commission sent a letter on March 28 to Spain and Poland reminding them that the VAT directive does not allow a reduced rate on fuel supplies. "In the letter we remind the national authorities that the VAT directive does not provide for the possibility of applying a reduced rate to fuel supplies," an EU spokesperson told EFE.

This VAT cut is part of the Spanish government's anti-crisis package announced at the end of March, worth about 5 billion euros, to counter energy price rises due to the war in the Middle East. Sources from the Ministry of Hacienda defend it as a temporary, non-structural measure and maintain constructive dialogue with Brussels. The VAT reduction will cost around 507 million euros until June 30.

Spain has already cut special hydrocarbon taxes to the EU minimum, with discounts of 14.49 cents per liter on 98-octane gasoline and 4.9 cents on diesel. The Commission stresses that measures should be selective and temporary, without boosting fossil fuel demand, and prioritize decarbonization. "Any effective national policy [...] must align with certain key principles," said Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis.

Last weekend, Spain, Germany, Italy, Portugal, and Austria sent a letter to Brussels requesting taxes on energy companies' extraordinary profits.

مقالات ذات صلة

Ursula von der Leyen announces EU electricity tax cuts at Brussels press conference, screen shows falling prices and energy icons against Middle East crisis backdrop.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Brussels proposes cutting electricity taxes amid energy crisis

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

The European Commission, led by Ursula von der Leyen, proposes reducing electricity taxes, reviewing the carbon emissions market, and avoiding premature nuclear plant closures to lower energy prices amid the Middle East war. These measures address surging oil prices due to the Strait of Hormuz closure, costing 6 billion euros since February 28. The EU meanwhile rejects military involvement in the conflict despite pressure from Donald Trump.

Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu warned the Council of Ministers on Wednesday against measures on fuel VAT described as « as demagogic as they are useless ». This comes as oil prices rise over 5% due to the war in the Middle East, already affecting fishermen, farmers, and truckers. He also requested proposals to protect consumers from energy price volatility.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Spain's Ministry of Transport has agreed with the National Road Transport Committee (CNTC) to modify the road freight price review formula, raising fuel's weight from 30% to 40% currently. The measure addresses the crisis from the Iran conflict since February 28 and adds to existing aids. The new royal decree-law will go to the Council of Ministers tomorrow.

Fuel prices in France have surged following Israeli-American strikes on Iran, reaching one-year highs. The government is closely monitoring the situation and has summoned distributors to verify price adjustments. TotalEnergies maintains a cap at 1.99 euros per liter in several stations.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

تخطط الحكومة الكينية لاستخدام دعم بقيمة 17 مليار شيلينغ لحماية المواطنين من زيادات أسعار الوقود خلال الـ 60 يوماً القادمة في حال امتدت صراعات الشرق الأوسط إلى ما بعد شهري مايو ويونيو. وقد كشف وزير المالية جون مبادي عن هذه الخطط لأعضاء البرلمان، بما في ذلك إمكانية تعديل ضريبة القيمة المضافة.

In the continuing German fuel price crisis driven by Middle East tensions, economist Veronika Grimm warns against discounts to sustain high prices and curb demand, citing severe supply bottlenecks in the Strait of Hormuz. She critiques broad relief amid limited fiscal space.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Following the December 19 announcement of plans for an economic emergency decree, the Colombian government of Gustavo Petro on December 31 issued the tax package via Decree 1390, targeting 11 trillion pesos to address a 16.3 trillion fiscal deficit after Congress rejected reforms. Finance Minister Germán Ávila noted it covers much but not all 2026 needs, impacting liquor, cigarettes, patrimony, finance, and imports.

 

 

 

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