Climate Change

Croatia aims to be climate neutral by 2050

croatia climate neutral 2050

Photo: Ministry of Economy and Sustainable Development

Published

January 29, 2021

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

January 29, 2021

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Addressing the topic of the energy transition in Croatia and the country’s aim to become climate neutral by 2050, Minister of Economy and Sustainable Development Tomislav Ćorić said Croatia will face many challenges on this path, while Prime Minister Andrej Plenković said that EUR 9 billion has been secured from the EU’s multiannual financial framework for the energy transition.

Tomislav Ćorić, who leads Croatia’s ministry for sustainable development, has said that Croatia has opted for a climate-neutral economy by 2050.

In achieving this goal the country will face a number of challenges, including building new energy transmission capacities, increasing production from renewable energy sources, and financing all those investments, Ćorić said at the conference “Energy 2021: Managing the Green Transition.”

EUR 9.15 billion has been secured for the green transition fromthe EU’s multiannual financial framework

Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenković also addressed the conference, saying that EUR 9.15 billion has been secured for the needs of the green transition from the multiannual financial framework of the European Union (EU). According to Plenković, these funds will be the initiator of accelerated development in the country.

The concept of Croatian energy development must be based on new and clean technologies, innovation, and research, and the funds provided through the EU’s regional development and cohesion policy will enable that green transition, Plenković said, local media reported.

Hydropower will remain the most important source of energy for HEP

The President of the Management Board of power utility HrvatskaElektroprivreda (HEP), FraneBarbarić, said that the company is currently installing several solar photovoltaic (PV) facilities, and 11 more PV systems with a total capacity of 120 MW in cooperation with municipal authorities. The largest investment in wind energy is the 75 MW Korlat wind farm, he added.

By the end of 2030, the company plans to have about 700 MW in wind farms and solar power plants.

However, the most important source of energy for HEP will still be hydropower, which is why it is modernizing and expanding existing hydropower plants, but also building new ones, such as the EUR 450 million hydroenergy system Kosinj and the hydropower plant Senj 2 project, he 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

Ember Warming 2024 global power demand rise with fossil fuels

Ember: Warming’s 2024 share of global power demand rise was covered with fossil fuels

09 April 2025 - Renewables and nuclear energy met 79,1% of 2024 global power demand growth. The fossil fuels share was bigger than the part attributed to the annual rise in temperatures.

croatia methane greenpeace catf analysis oil gas ina

Croatia among EU’s top three emitters of methane from oil, gas industry

08 April 2025 - The first large independent analysis in Croatia of methane emissions from the oil and gas infrastructure was carried out, according to Greenpeace Croatia

croatia social plan for climate policy marija vuckovic minister

Croatia earmarks EUR 1.6 billion for Social Plan for Climate Policy

08 April 2025 - The Ministry of Environmental Protection and Green Transition has presented the Social Plan for Climate Policy and the EU ETS 2

Join Young Bled Strategic Forum Join – Applications now open

Join Young Bled Strategic Forum – applications now open

04 April 2025 - Applications for the Young Bled Strategic Forum, taking place from August 29 to 31 in Pokljuka in Slovenia, are now officially open