Mikael Larsson believes that by lowering the electricity tax, costs can be reduced within the existing system that is used today.

He believes that today's electricity subsidy is a lengthy and bureaucratic process within the Swedish Social Insurance Agency and the Energy Markets Inspectorate.

We see a unified model

He instead wants to reform an electricity price model with a common Sweden price.

But how?

- By setting a Swedish equilibrium price based on expected domestic demand and production based on today's four electricity price ranges, we can export surplus production at an export price that Nordpool sets, says Mikael Larsson and continues:

- We get two electricity prices, but our neighboring countries get to buy the same amount of electricity.

It would probably give a better electricity price all over Sweden with today's electricity price areas where the reduction would likely be significant.

In the clip, Mikael Larsson further develops his reasoning.