Kuwait's parliament on
Wednesday passed a bill allowing the government to raise power and water
charges on foreign residents and on businesses but exempted the Gulf state's
citizens.
RT
News report continues:
Thirty-one
MPs voted in favour while 17 members opposed it. The second and final round of
voting will take place after two weeks.
MPs
initially rejected the bill but later approved it after Kuwaiti citizens were
exempted.
If
given the final clearance, it will be the first time in 50 years that oil-rich
Kuwait raise power charges.
Like
other crude exporters, Kuwait's oil-dependent revenues dwindled since oil
prices crashed by over 70 percent from its mid-2014 peak.
The
bill stipulates to raise power charges in apartment buildings, overwhelmingly
used by foreigners, from the current flat rate of two fils (0.7 cents) per
kilowatt gradually to up to 15 fils (five cents) per kilowatt.
For
commercial uses, it will be raised from two fils per kilowatt to 25 fils per
kilowatt.
Water
prices will also be more than doubled.
Electricity
and Water Minister Ahmad al-Jassar told a heated debate in parliament that the
government was paying around US$8.8 billion annually to subsidize power and water
production.
If
no action was taken, consumption would triple by 2035 and subsidies would rise
to US$25 billion, the minister said.
The
aim of the bill was to cut consumption by over 30 percent, he said.
But
most lawmakers strongly rejected the government plan to raise power charges on
citizens and blamed it for what they called economic mismanagement.
"This
would be the biggest crime against citizens and expatriates," Shiite MP
Saleh Ashour said.
Independent
MP Jamal al-Omar blamed government failure for the economic crisis.
"The
cause of the crisis is not the drop in oil prices alone, but also the
government's failure ... Our government is incapable of managing the
country," Omar said.
The
government also plans to hike heavily-subsidized petrol prices, one of the
cheapest in the world.
Kuwait
has posted a budget deficit of US$20 billion in the past fiscal year, according
to provisional figures, following 16 years of windfall due to high oil prices.
The
emirate is home to 1.3 million native citizens and around 3.0 million
foreigners.
Kuwait has remained the
only country in the Gulf not to raise power and petrol tariffs since the sharp
drop in oil prices.
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