Renewables

Cyprus halts solar power licensing amid environmental assessment

Cyprus halts solar power licensing environmental

Photo: Andreas Senftleben from Pixabay

Published

December 15, 2020

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

December 15, 2020

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Authorities in Cyprus are changing the legal framework for photovoltaic systems to protect the environment and assure compliance with national and European law. Licensing is suspended as many projects are on arable land or they may harm ecosystems.

The Department of Environment told relevant ministries in Cyprus that it blocked the processing of applications for setting up solar power plants until a comprehensive spatial plan and an institutional frame are adopted. The regulatory body, which operates under the Ministry of Agriculture, Rural Development and Environment, said it found that many locations for the projects are in irrigated and fertile land and in protected areas.

Some investors plan to install photovoltaic units in places suitable for animal husbandry and quarries and, in numerous cases, the facilities may harm the ecosystem or geomorphology, the letter reveals, as reported by Philenews.

Such an approach would put the island republic in “serious danger” of breaching domestic and European law and the rulings of the European Court of Justice, the Department of Environment stressed and added it received 92 applications in the past two years, with more to come.

Strategic environmental assessment may take one year

As building costs for photovoltaics decline, an increasing number of projects are springing up in the European Union and environmentalists are calling for stricter rules for the protection of agricultural land and natural habitats.

An application for an 80 MW solar power plant is expected to be filed soon

The Ministry of Energy has started a tendering procedure for a strategic environmental impact assessment study for locations intended for renewable energy units, with the aim of aligning them with the law. The article notes the process may last another year.

Big projects can’t be approved under current rules

Applications for an 80 MW photovoltaic plant in Agios Ioannis Malountas and a 20 MW facility in Koutrafas, both in the Nicosia district, are expected to be filed soon, the department revealed and said they can’t be approved without changes in the legal framework.

Cyprus estimates it would need 750 MW in solar power plants by 2030.

The regulatory authority recently told Earthlight Park to reduce the area of its project in Sotira near Limassol to protect trees and other plants and narrow it to 7.5 MW from 11.1 MW. The firm must install the cables underground so that birds are protected and it won’t be allowed to pave the existing dirt roads or to build new ones. The site is adjacent to the Natura 2000 area of Paramaliou river.

Separately, many irregularities were found in a group of 11 projects with total capacity of 45.2 MW in Larnaca district. The cumulative effect for several of them that are adjacent to Natura 2000 protected areas wasn’t considered at all.

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

bulgaria hybrid park pernik solar storage solaris holding eurohold sunotec electrohold

Solaris Holding inaugurates hybrid park on waste landfill in Bulgaria

26 September 2024 - The firm has inaugurated a PV plant with a storage facility on a former industrial waste site in Pernik, near Bulgaria’s capital Sofia

Jadar valley serbia

Jadar project timeline: a full overview of the most controversial investment in Serbia’s recent history

20 September 2024 - No investment in Serbia’s recent history has sparked as much controversy as Rio Tinto’s lithium mining project Jadar. All about the Jadar project, from 2001 to the present day.

Coal plants Western Balkans SO2 pollution 2023

Coal plants in Western Balkans increase SO2 pollution in 2023

19 September 2024 - Coal plants in the Western Balkans emitted more sulfur dioxide last year than in 2022, according to the Comply or Close report

Third Von der Leyen European Commission green transition environment Teresa Ribera

Third of Von der Leyen’s next European Commission to handle green transition, environment

18 September 2024 - Spain's Teresa Ribera and Demark's Dan Jørgensen are Ursula von der Leyen's picks for the top energy jobs in the next European Commission