BRUSSELS, March 10 (Reuters) – European Union governments are set to ask the ‌European Commission to propose reforms to ‌the bloc’s carbon market by July, draft conclusions for ​a summit of EU leaders next week showed.

At their summit on 19 March, EU leaders will ask Brussels “to present a review of ‌the emissions ⁠trading system (ETS) at the latest by July 2026, to both reduce ⁠the volatility of the carbon price and mitigate its impact on electricity prices,” according ​to the ​draft conclusions, seen ​by Reuters.

The draft ‌conclusions said the reform should preserve the central role of the ETS in the EU’s energy transition. That’s despite calls from some governments, including Slovakia and the Czech ‌Republic, for the EU ​to suspend or weaken ​the system, ​as a way to cut ‌energy bills.

The European Commission has ​said it ​plans to propose the ETS reform in the third quarter of the ​year, but ‌has not given a specific date.

(Reporting ​by Kate Abnett, Jan Strupczewski, Editing ​by Charlotte Van Campenhout)