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imageMADRID: Spain's Finance Ministry has withdrawn 3.6 billion euros ($4.9 billion) in financing for electricity reform at the last minute, casting doubt on the government's signature reform for 2013 and potentially hitting companies and consumers.

A statement on the amendment of the reform as it passed Spain's upper house showed the government had pulled back from providing the funding injection initially agreed as it concentrates on whittling down the public deficit, this year set to reach 6.5 percent of gross domestic product.

Although fears of the Spanish economy needing a bailout have faded, the government is still vigilant on the deficit as the country pulls out of recession and foreign investors start to pour money in.

However, the move will put an extra burden on companies such as Iberdrola and Gas Natural, and indirectly on their customers, who may eventually have to fund a greater part of the cost of a so-called power tariff deficit built up over years of setting regulated prices below the cost of production and distribution.

Copyright Reuters, 2013

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