Electricity

Slovenia exempts households, small firms from green power surcharge for three months

Slovenia exempts households, small firms from green power surcharge for three months

Photo: David Mark from Pixabay

Published

March 23, 2020

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

March 23, 2020

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Slovenia temporarily freed small business customers and households from the obligation to pay for the support to producers of power from renewable sources and high-efficiency cogeneration. Additionally, the network charge has been significantly lowered, also as a response to the outbreak of COVID-19.

As part of the emergency measures to mitigate the impact of the coronavirus epidemic and maintain the financial stability of Slovenia, the new government suspended charging households and small enterprises for the support the state gives to producers of power from renewable sources and high-efficiency cogeneration. In the decree, it revealed the exemption, officially for the low voltage category, would last for three months until the end of May.

The cabinet of Prime Minister Janez Janša said the electricity bills in the said class would decrease by one fifth on average. Cogeneration is the combined production of heat and power or CHP.

Monthly electricity bills in the small voltage category will decrease by 27%, the Energy Agency estimated

At the same time, the Energy Agency temporarily cut the network charge by 33% for households and small firms in the same period. It estimated the exclusion the capacity charge, one of its three tariffs, translates to a drop in power bills of 27% together with the government’s suspension of the said surcharge.

Two weeks ago, the outgoing government regulated the category of small green power facilities and devices with a decree. It decided that advanced combined units for heat and power with the capacity of 50 kW at most, solar power plants of a maximum of 1 MW and wind turbines not stronger than 50 kW don’t require a building permit.

The bylaw, intended to ease the administrative burden, came into force on March 21. It excludes units for self-consumption. The country must achieve binding targets for electricity generation from renewables or it will face high fines.

Of note, Slovenia’s power transmission and production companies have reacted to the coronavirus outbreak with emergency measures.

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 india ChemVolt Global ElevenEs

Indian ChemVolt Global, Serbian ElevenEs forge strategic partnership for batteries

08 October 2025 - India-based ChemVolt Global and ElevenEs, headquartered in Serbia, established a strategic partnership

turkey teias world bank loan Humberto Lopez Orhan Kaldirim Alparslan Bayraktar

Turkey’s TEİAŞ signs USD 750 million loan contract with World Bank

08 October 2025 - A USD 750 million loan will be used for the Transforming Power Transmission System Project, Turkey’s transmission system operator TEİAŞ said

Montenegrin TSO CGES buying power transmission lines Serbian counterpart EMS

Montenegrin TSO CGES buying power transmission lines from its Serbian counterpart EMS

08 October 2025 - Serbian TSO EMS agreed with CGES agreed that each would become the owner of the parts of overhead transmission lines on its country's territory

Romania Hidroelectrica hydropower battery storage

Romania’s Hidroelectrica to equip hydropower plants with battery storage

08 October 2025 - Romanian state-owned power utility Hidroelectrica plans to integrate battery storage with all its run-of-river hydropower plants