Environment

Serbia, Croatia, BiH, Bulgaria, Romania, Cyprus among countries to improve green transition scores – EBRD

Photo: twitter.com/EBRD

Published

November 13, 2018

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

November 13, 2018

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), Bulgaria, Romania, and Cyprus are among countries that improved their 2018 scores in the area of green transition compared to 2017, while the scores of Albania, Macedonia, Greece, Kosovo*, Montenegro, and Turkey, among other markets, remained unchanged, according to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development’s (EBRD) Transition Report 2018-19.

On a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 being the worst and 10 the best, Serbia improved its green transition score from 5.7 to 5.9, Croatia from 6.2 to 6.5, BiH from 5 to 5.3, Bulgaria from 6 to 6.2, Romania from 6 to 6.2, and Cyprus from 6.2 to 6.5.

At the same time, Albania remained at 4.4, Macedonia at 4.9, Greece at 6.3, Kosovo* at 3.4, Montenegro at 5.3, and Turkey at 5.3.

Many economies where the EBRD invests have made progress in the area of green transition by ratifying the Paris Agreement and making legislative commitments to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, according to the report.

Overall, however, significant challenges remain across the EBRD regions in the area of green transition, particularly as regards (i) reducing emissions in the construction, industrial and energy sectors, (ii) strengthening resistance to the negative impact of climate change in the area of agricultural production, and (iii) increasing protection for land and marine areas.

In many parts of the EBRD regions, additional work also needs to be carried out with a view to increasing the amount of electricity that is derived from renewable sources, according to the report.

EBRD economists have developed a methodology which measures transition economies’ progress against six key qualities of a sustainable market economy, looking to see whether they are competitive, well-governed, green, inclusive, resilient and integrated.

The resilience score takes into account financial resilience and energy resilience. Only very modest progress has been made in the area of financial resilience, but energy resilience appears to have improved across the EBRD regions, according to the report.

Macedonia is one of the countries with an improved legal framework regulating the energy sector, after it passed a new energy law in May 2018. The law sets out a timetable for full retail market liberalization and requires the competitive procurement of new renewable energy capacity, which is to be subsidized via a premium paid on top of the wholesale price.

In Kosovo*, the unbundling of the power transmission network has progressed further, with parliament assuming control of the transmission system operator KOSTT in line with the 2016 electricity market law.

In Turkey, the private sector’s role in the energy sector has grown significantly over the past few years, with further progress being achieved in 2017. In the area of power generation, new investment is predominantly carried out by independent producers, and the privatization of existing public plants (especially small to medium-sized hydropower plants) is ongoing.

Despite recent progress, much remains to be done in terms of improving domestic and inter-country connectivity, boosting private-sector participation in the energy sector, implementing tariff reforms and further improving regulatory frameworks across the EBRD regions, according to the report.

* This designation is without prejudice to positions on status and is in line with UNSCR 1244/99 and the ICJ Opinion on the Kosovo declaration of independence.
Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

montenegro italy admir sahmanovic subsea cable solar wind

4 GW of solar, wind projects in pipeline in Montenegro – minister

04 April 2025 - Speaking at the Economic Dialogue Montenegro-Italy round table, minister Admir Šahmanović called for stronger cooperation between the two countries

Share coal power Finland nearly zero cogeneration plant shuts down

Share of coal power in Finland nearly zero as cogeneration plant shuts down

03 April 2025 - The now closed Salmisaari coal plant accounted for just 0.8% of the electricity mix in Finland together with three remaining ones

solar nuclear power prices europe eurelectric

Solar, nuclear lower Europe’s power prices by 30% in March

03 April 2025 - Solar broke a record in power generation in March for the third consecutive month, making up more than 10% of Europe’s electricity mix, Eurelectric said

PPC announces 5.8 billion plan for Western Macedonia, focused on photovoltaics, storage and data centers

PPC plans EUR 5.8 billion makeover of Western Macedonia coal region, including data centers

03 April 2025 - PPC presented a EUR 5.8 billion investment plan for the coal region of Western Macedonia in northern Greece