Renewables

Albania launches net metering for solar PV prosumers

Albania net metering

Photo: Pixabay

Published

July 19, 2019

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

July 19, 2019

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Albania has put in place a net metering scheme for solar photovoltaic (PV) prosumers, the Ministry of Infrastructure and Energy has announced.

Albania’s net metering scheme covers small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and households with solar PV systems whose capacity does not exceed 500 kW.

The Albanian government expects the scheme to enable the deployment of 200 MW of PV, pv magazine reported.

Eligible projects will be entitled to net metering tariffs equal to electricity market prices with surplus power calculated by distribution system operator (DSO) OSHEE on a monthly basis and final payments at the end of each year.

Net metering originally envisaged under 2017 law

A net metering scheme for photovoltaic (PV) or wind energy with a capacity of up to 500 kW was originally envisaged under Albania’s 2017 law promoting renewable energy, the European Commission said in its latest report on Albania’s alignment with the EU acquis.

This law also introduced schemes to support renewable energy producers above 2 MW (for solar power) and 3 MW (for wind power) through a competitive procedure. The procedure is based on the support scheme ‘contracts for difference’ to be paid on top of the market price of electricity.

Albania’s revised national renewable-energy action plan for 2018-2020 envisages that 38% of gross final energy consumption will come from renewable energy sources, in line with the commitments made to reach 38% renewable energy target in 2020.

However, the European Commission warned in the report that urgent efforts are needed to increase the share of renewable energy sources other than hydropower.

Albania depends almost exclusively on hydropower for its electricity generation (98% of its electricity generation comes from hydropower), making it vulnerable to unfavorable hydrological conditions in the summer. In addition, electricity from hydropower is not sufficient to meet its needs. Albania is a net importer of electricity and ensuring the security of its power supply is a challenge, the European Commission said.

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

Serbia’s Đedović Handanović in Azerbaijan for discussions on gas projects

08 April 2026 - Serbian Minister Dubravka Đedović Handanović met in Baku with Azerbaijani ministers and the head of SOCAR

croatia rimac technology new bmw i7 sedan battery

BMW, Rimac to unveil fully electric i7 on April 22

08 April 2026 - The new BMW i7 will be the first BMW Group BEV to feature a jointly developed battery system, manufactured at the Rimac Campus near Zagreb

china solar wind vision iran war

Xi: Pioneering wind, solar energy was visionary move

08 April 2026 - Xi Jinping stressed the importance of developing hydropower and environmental protection, as well as of a safe expansion of nuclear energy

tab battery sodium-ion bess

Slovenian TAB plans to develop its own sodium-ion batteries

08 April 2026 - Slovenian battery manufacturer TAB recently obtained approval for a trial production of sodium-ion cells