Electricity

Top 3 in September: New fossil fuel subsidies planned in EU, Tesla, decarbonization

September

Photo: BGEN

Published

October 1, 2019

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

October 1, 2019

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The world is taking strides to a point of no return on climate breakdown, yet no less than 5 EU member states are planning to introduce new fossil fuel subsidies by 2030. This story was number-one on our English-language Top 3 Most Read list for September.

The Top 3 Most Read list for September is also available for our portal’s Serbian/local language version.

1 – Greece, Slovenia among five EU countries to introduce new fossil fuel subsidies – report

Five EU countries including the UK, Germany, Greece, Poland, and Slovenia are looking to introduce new fossil fuel subsidies by 2030, an analysis of the 28 Member States’ draft energy and climate plans (NECPs) has revealed.

In a new report, “Fossil fuel subsidies in draft EU National Energy and Climate Plans: Shortcomings and final call for action,” experts from the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), Friends of the Earth (FoE) Netherlands, and Climate Action Network (CAN) Europe have analyzed the EU Member States’ draft NECPs, which require governments to report on their fossil fuel subsidies and plans to phase them out, the CAN has said in a press release.

Greece, Slovenia among five EU countries to introduce new fossil fuel subsidies – report

2 – Tesla “hoping” to open in Croatia, Serbia in early 2020 – Elon Musk

U.S. automotive and energy company Tesla, Inc. is “hoping to open in Slovakia, Croatia, Serbia & most of Eastern Europe early next year,” its co-founder and CEO Elon Musk has tweeted.

“Finally, we will do Nikola Tesla proud by having his cars in his countries of origin!” – according to Musk’s tweet.

Tesla “hoping” to open in Croatia, Serbia in early 2020 – Elon Musk

3 – Greece to start shutting down coal power plants

A business plan being drafted by the management of majority state-owned Public Power Corporation (PPC) includes a “sweeping divestment” of its coal power plants in Greece.

The plan to start shutting down PPC’s coal-fired power plants, which is expected to be ready by mid-November, is meant to be factored into the structural changes of the electricity market in Greece and the post-bailout assessment of the Greek economy by creditors.

Greece to start shutting down coal power plants

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

Record battery installations EU 2025 Bulgaria enters top 3

Record battery installations in EU in 2025 as Bulgaria enters top 3

28 January 2026 - The European Union added 27.1 GWh of battery capacity last year, marking a 12th consecutive record – driven by utility-scale storage

croatia ante susnjar minister renewables subsidies jutarnji list energy conference

Šušnjar: Croatia allocated EUR 4 billion so far to boost renewables; subsidies for wind, solar to end

28 January 2026 - Minister of Economy Ante Šušnjar said at an energy conference that the money could have been put to better use

končar power transformer tanks Siemens factory

Croatia’s Končar to invest EUR 500 million in manufacturing over three years

27 January 2026 - Končar has opened a power transformer tank factory with Siemens Energy and it plans to develop anti-drone protection for energy facilities

Research project in Romania explores the use of agrisolar systems with batteries in agriculture

Researchers in Romania developing agrisolar system with batteries

27 January 2026 - An agrisolar power plant with batteries is being set up in a research and demonstration project in Romania