Renewables

Romania allocates EUR 52 million in grants to citizens for rooftop solar

Romania roof solar power grants

Photo: Pixabay

Published

June 15, 2020

Country

Comments

0

Share

Published:

June 15, 2020

Country:

Comments:

0

Share

The state fund responsible for the Casa Verde Fotovoltaice scheme in Romania approved 48.8% of applications for rooftop solar power systems in the first round of grants, completed one and a half years after launch. EU funds cover as much as EUR 4,100 or 90% of the cost for the installation of photovoltaic systems per individual beneficiary.

The Environment Fund Administration (AFM) said it would start signing contracts with homeowners eligible for subsidies of EUR 52.1 million in total from the Regional Operational Programme – ROP 2014-2020. The grants are for solar power stations on roofs of residential structures in Romania.

ROP is funded by the European Union and EUR 110.9 million was secured for the scheme, but the agency rejected 13,339 applications while approving 12,718. The maximum for individual subsidies is EUR 4,100 or up to 90% of the cost for solar panels with at least 3 kW in capacity.

AFM claims the process would be simplified and that more installers would be certified

The new public call will be published in the autumn, according to AFM’s new chief Andreea Kohalmi Szabo. She said she would introduce “major changes” aimed at simplifying the application process, shortening evaluation and expanding the list of certified solar power installers. Kohalmi Szabo said those that didn’t get funds in the first round of Casa Verde Fotovoltaice should reapply.

Greenpeace Romania criticized the government as no solar panels have been installed on a single rooftop since January of last year, when the grants program was launched. Furthermore, it said, AFM rejected most of the applications over expired documents, contradicting its earlier statements.

Upon suspending the first round in September, the authorities said applicants didn’t need to submit new versions of the necessary documents

After suspending the round in September due to a computer crash, the fund’s management claimed homeowners wouldn’t need to obtain the same papers, the organization added. Greenpeace stressed more than 200 installers who were authorized for Casa Verde Fotovoltaice now face economic difficulties for not being able to use the equipment they bought for the purpose.

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

europe flexibility seasonal balancing iea report

Flexibility needs to be met by demand response, batteries, hydrogen, but also thermal, hydropower plants – IEA

03 May 2024 - The report Managing the Seasonal Variability of Electricity Demand and Supply analyzes the situation in Europe, India, and Indonesia

IPTO suspends all electricity imports until May 7 to protect the Greek system

Greece suspends electricity imports until May 7 to protect system

03 May 2024 - The Greek Independent Power Transmission Operator (IPTO) has announced the suspension of all electricity imports during the hours around noon

Two agrosolar power plants are planned to be constructed in Serbia

Two agrisolar projects launched in northern Serbia

02 May 2024 - In the vicinity of Kikinda in Serbia, two new agrisolar projects are underway: Solar Power Plant Delta and Brankov solar

el-dorado-electricity-imports-north-macedonia-rke

North Macedonia: ‘Solar El Dorado’ cuts electricity imports to 2.75%

02 May 2024 - In 2023, North Macedonia's new solar capacity increased by as much as 251% compared to 2022