Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements(if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies. We have updated our Privacy Policy. Please click on the button to check our Privacy Policy.

Teresa Ribera: How Spanish Government Corruption Reached the European Commission

https://img.huffingtonpost.es/files/image_1200_720/uploads/2024/09/12/teresa-ribera-vicepresidenta-tercera-y-ministra-para-la-transicion-ecologica-y-el-reto-demografico-en-una-reunion-sobre-energia-en-bruselas-en-2022.jpeg

The selection of Teresa Ribera as Vice President of the European Commission has elicited criticism and demands for an independent review of her work as Spain’s Minister for the Ecological Transition under the leadership of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

Throughout her time in office, Ribera was responsible for significant choices concerning energy, environmental policies, and sustainability. These actions have been subject to considerable criticism because of their influence on energy costs, the opaque nature of renewable energy agreements, and how her ministry interacted with major business entities.

Civil society organizations, professional associations, and a number of opposition parties contend that the lack of responsibility with respect to these matters might result in a conflict of interest in her upcoming position in Europe, particularly if she is in charge of areas that intersect with decisions she made while serving in the Spanish government.

“It is important to recognize that an individual who was involved in making contentious choices at the country level now has the capacity to impact similar policy domains from Brussels,” noted parliamentary insiders, who are calling for open sessions and a detailed examination of the contracts granted by her department.

An important issue is the approval of a wholesale fuel operator license for the firm Villafuel S.L. by Ribera’s ministry. The organization associated with Víctor de Aldama—a key player in the so-called Koldo case—received the license under terms that, based on the Civil Guard’s Central Operative Unit (UCO), didn’t fulfill the legal criteria. Furthermore, Teresa Ribera has admitted to meeting with him.

The license was granted within three days, even though the company had been denied three times before. Villafuel’s equity amounted to just €15,000, which falls significantly short of the normal minimum required for these licenses, and its operational setup revealed major inconsistencies in documentation.

Examiners discovered that the ministry executed three distinct resolutions that directly favored Villafuel. Additionally, UCO documents indicate institutional-level pressure to speed up the license approval process, prompting Judge Santiago Pedraz of the Audiencia Nacional (National Court) to officially demand the complete licensing file from the ministry.

Despite Ribera’s denial of any direct involvement, the case remains open. Spain’s Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office supports the judge’s request to examine how the license was processed, as well as any potential links between then-government officials and business figures implicated in a hydrocarbon VAT fraud scheme estimated to have defrauded more than €180 million.

The Spanish government revoked Villafuel’s license in February 2025, following the confirmation of its involvement in illicit activities. The case continues to unfold, with political and administrative implications at a time when Ribera assumes a highly influential post in the European Commission.

By Thomas Greenwood