The Norwegian parliament has adopted a support scheme for electricity costs aimed at households. When the market price of elspot on average exceeds NOK 0.7 per kilowatt hour for one month, the state will provide direct support to electricity customers, with a support share of 55 percent in December 2021 and 80 percent as of January through August 2022. From September 2022 the support share was increased to 90 percent. The support is provided for a monthly power consumption of up to 5000 kilowatt hours. The CPI measures the support scheme for electricity costs as a direct discount on electricity prices aimed at households. The CPI takes the five bidding areas into account when calculating the electricity index. For the bidding area where the elspot prices on average for the month do not exceed NOK 0.7 per kilowatt hour (excl. VAT), the actual market prices paid by households are used. While compensated prices are used for elspot in bidding areas where the average elspot price for the month does exceed NOK 0.7 per kilowatt hour. The discount is applied to all contract types for electricity that are included in the CPI for the given bidding area. The value added tax (VAT) is added to the price in bidding areas that are not exempt from this. The calculations include an estimate of how much of the consumption takes place in cabins and is therefore not covered by the support scheme. As for the period from April to December 2022, a reduced tax on grid rent has also been adopted. The electricity tax is included in the CPI in the calculation of the index for grid rent.
CPI up 7.5 per cent last 12 months
From October 2021 to October 2022 the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased by 7.5 per cent, while the CPI adjusted for tax changes and excluding energy products (CPI-ATE) rose by 5.9 per cent. Both the CPI and the CPI-ATE increased by 0.3 per cent from September 2022 to October 2022.
Published: 10 November 2022
¹ The indices included for the components electricity and grid rent are adjusted for tax-changes. This means that the amount of the electricity subsidy is added to the price that the households pay. Thus, this is a hypothetical CPI that shows what overall price growth would have been if no support had been introduced by the government, and the households paid the market price instead. The electricity subsidy consists of the govenrment's temporary electricity subsidy scheme and lower electricity tax.