Macri's reforms burned in gas-tariff fight
A retreat on subsidy cuts casts doubts on the Argentine president’s broader energy agenda
Among the most vexing problems on president Mauricio Macri's desk when he took office was Argentina's energy crisis. Subsidies were unsustainably costly, eating up more than 10% of federal spending-a bigger outlay than education and healthcare combined-and growing imports were sucking much-needed dollars out of the country's coffers. The answer was clear enough: raise prices for consumers and provide incentives for domestic producers. But the politics have proven far more difficult. Macri and his energy minister Juan José Aranguren's first attempt to deal with the subsidy question was disastrous. They tried to put in place a 400% increase in gas prices for most consumers and a sixfold increa
Also in this section
24 March 2026
It is an unusual story of out with the new and in with the old, as America First Refining shows the US going back to trusted energy security developments
23 March 2026
A complex and sometimes contradictory web of factors that include unpredictable oil prices, the globalisation of LNG markets, the expansion of Middle Eastern sovereign capital and the growth of datacentre demand will shape the energy landscape beyond 2026
23 March 2026
The Strait of Hormuz crisis highlights how key waterways can become global chokepoints
20 March 2026
Attacks on key oil and LNG assets across the Gulf mean a prolonged supply disruption, with damage to Qatar’s export capacity undermining confidence in the global gas system






