Renewables

EU NECPs: Bulgaria, Romania, Slovenia, Cyprus, others need to step up renewables ambition

Photo: Pixabay

Published

June 21, 2019

Country

Comments

0

Share

Published:

June 21, 2019

Country:

Comments:

0

Share

The European Commission has released an assessment of the EU member states’ first-ever draft integrated national energy and climate plans (NECPs), urging them to step up ambition to implement the Paris Agreement and reach the agreed EU 2030 energy and climate targets.

The European Commission’s assessment is that EU member states’ draft integrated national energy and climate plans (NECPs) currently fall short both in terms of renewables and energy efficiency contributions in terms of reaching the 2030 energy and climate goals. For renewables, the gap could be as big as 1.6 percentage points. For energy efficiency, the gap can be as big as 6.2 percentage points (if considering primary energy consumption) or 6 percentage points (if considering final energy consumption).

“Final plans are due by the end of the year and our recommendations show where more effort is needed: for example, stronger ambition, more policy detail, better specified investment needs, or more work on social fairness,” said European Commission Vice-President for the Energy Union Maroš Šefčovič.

For greenhouse gas emissions, the overall greenhouse gas reduction for the Union is estimated to be already in line with a -40% greenhouse gas emission reduction for 2030 compared to 1990. For the corresponding EU target for sectors outside the EU Emissions Trading System, there is a gap of 2 percentage points.

Member States now have until the end of 2019 finalize their NECPs for the period 2021-2030, and to implement them effectively in the years to come. The national plans should provide clarity and predictability for businesses and the financial sector to stimulate necessary private investments.

Bulgaria, Romania, Slovenia, Cyprus among countries that need to raise renewables ambition

Bulgaria, Romania, Slovenia, and Cyprus are among countries the European Commission is urging to make appropriate contributions to the EU’s 2030 target for renewable energy.

The European Commission invited Bulgaria to raise the level of ambition for 2030 to a renewable share of at least 27%, Romania to at least 34%, Slovenia to at least 37%, and Cyprus to at least 23%.

At the same time, the Commission advises Croatia to underpin “the welcome level of ambition” of a 36.4% renewable energy share for 2030 with detailed and quantified policies and measures, while calling on Greece to enable a timely and cost-effective achievement of its 31% contribution to the EU 2030 target for renewable energy.

Bulgaria, Romania, Croatia already reached their 2020 renewables targets

Each EU Member State has its own Europe 2020 target. The national targets take into account the Member States’ different starting points, renewable energy potential, and economic performance.

Among the 28 EU Member States, 11 have already reached the level required to meet their national 2020 targets: Bulgaria, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Croatia, Italy, Lithuania, Hungary, Romania, Finland, and Sweden, according to a press release from Eurostat earlier this year.

Moreover, Latvia and Austria are around 1 percentage point (pp) away from their 2020 targets. At the opposite end of the scale, the Netherlands (7.4 pp from its national 2020 objective), France (6.7 pp), Ireland (5.3 pp), the United Kingdom (4.8 pp), Luxembourg (4.6 pp), Poland (4.1 pp) and Belgium (3.9 pp) are the furthest away from their targets.

Tags: , ,
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

Artificial intelligence can detect the toxicity of chemicals

Artificial intelligence can detect toxicity of chemicals

03 May 2024 - Swedish scientists have developed a method using artificial intelligence (AI) to identify toxic chemicals based solely on knowledge of their molecular structure

budapest-air-pollutants-fog

EU set to impose stricter limits on major air pollutants

29 April 2024 - The new rules set stricter 2030 limits for air pollutants with a severe impact on human health, including particulate matter

Mitsubishi Power commissions desulfurization system Serbia s TENT A coal plant

Mitsubishi Power commissions desulfurization system in Serbia’s TENT A coal plant

25 April 2024 - Serbia finally got its second coal plant desulfurization system, in TENT A in Obrenovac near Belgrade, so the air is about to become cleaner

BiH drafts first interactive GIS map of locations vulnerable to forest fires

BiH drafts first interactive map of locations vulnerable to forest fires

24 April 2024 - Authors have identified key risk factors for forest fires as well as priority areas for conducting preventive measures