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Clean Industrial Deal
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Clean Industrial Deal

EU industrial competitiveness framework launched under the von der Leyen Commission; mandated the Gas Market Task Force to assess gas market functioning.

Last refreshed: 4 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

What did the Clean Industrial Deal's Gas Market Task Force conclude in June 2026?

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Common Questions
What is the EU Clean Industrial Deal and what does it do?
The Clean Industrial Deal is the European Commission's framework for keeping EU industry competitive while decarbonising. It bundles clean-energy procurement, carbon leakage protection under CBAM, cheaper renewable power access, and regulatory streamlining for energy-intensive sectors. It also mandated the Gas Market Task Force to assess EU gas market functioning.Source: EVREF:3879
What is the Gas Market Task Force and how does it relate to the Clean Industrial Deal?
The Gas Market Task Force (GMTF) is a joint body of the European Commission's DG Energy, ACER and ESMA, created under the mandate of the Clean Industrial Deal. It published its first report (SWD(2026)147) on 2 June 2026, finding EU gas markets functioning well and recommending MiFID-REMIT legislative alignment.Source: EVREF:3879
How does the Clean Industrial Deal relate to the European Green Deal?
The Clean Industrial Deal is the successor framework to the Green Deal, designed to address the Green Deal's blind spot: high energy costs as an existential risk to EU manufacturing competitiveness. Where the Green Deal treated high carbon prices as a transition tool, the Clean Industrial Deal treats industrial energy costs as a first-order policy problem requiring active management.Source: Background knowledge

Background

The Clean Industrial Deal is the European Commission's framework for maintaining industrial competitiveness while accelerating decarbonisation — the successor logic to the Green Deal that explicitly acknowledged cost-of-energy as an industrial-survival question rather than a transition externality. Proposed by Commission President von der Leyen at the start of the 2024-2029 Commission term, it draws on the Draghi Report's diagnosis that EU industry faces a structural energy-cost disadvantage versus US and Chinese competitors. The Deal bundles measures across clean-energy procurement, carbon leakage protection under the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), access to cheaper renewable power, and regulatory streamlining for energy-intensive sectors.

One concrete instrument created under the Clean Industrial Deal is the Gas Market Task Force (GMTF), a joint body of DG Energy, ACER and ESMA mandated to assess EU gas spot and derivatives market functioning. The GMTF published its first formal output, SWD(2026)147, on 2 June 2026, finding EU gas markets 'functioning well' with no emergency intervention required . The document recommended MiFID-REMIT legislative alignment for energy derivatives reporting and called for enhanced algorithmic-trading surveillance. The GMTF mandate reflects the Clean Industrial Deal's dual concern: energy prices high enough to threaten industrial viability, and market Integrity questions raised during 2022-23 TTF volatility.

The Clean Industrial Deal sits above and sets direction for sector-specific instruments including the CBAM phase-in schedule, the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) cap trajectory, and energy purchasing aggregation mechanisms. Its significance for energy market policy is that it legitimised cost-of-energy as a first-order policy concern at the same level as decarbonisation, shifting the Commission's public framing from one in which high prices were a feature (carbon pricing) to one in which they are a risk requiring active management.

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