Renewables

Romania allows prosumers to install photovoltaic panels in multiple locations

Romania allows prosumers to install photovoltaic panels in several locations

Photo: Karl Callwood on Unsplash

Published

December 1, 2022

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

December 1, 2022

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The Government of Romania adopted an executive order to make it easier for prosumers to connect solar panels to the distribution grid and allow them to consume the output in locations other than where they installed their photovoltaic facility. They will also be allowed to set up small solar power facilities in several locations.

Romania is undergoing substantial legislative reforms to boost the deployment of renewables on all fronts, from planning to enable the construction of offshore wind farms to improving the grid and funding pilot projects for green energy. One of the goals of the ongoing energy transition efforts, which include nuclear power projects, is to increase energy independence from Russian fossil fuels. It’s a race against time, not least because deadlines for grants from the European Union are tight.

One of the pillars is the prosumers segment of the market. Equipping the system so that it can integrate tens of thousands of small distributed electricity sources is a tool for a substantial rise in production in the green energy sector. The government has just adopted another in a string of measures to simplify the procedure for setting up solar panels for self-consumption.

Just one notification to distributor

According to information obtained by the domestic media and an earlier statement from Minister of Energy Virgil Popescu, prosumers will only need to notify the distributor to be able to install solar panels of up to 10.8 kW in capacity.

The decree transposes the EU’s Renewable Energy Directive RED 2

The company can still reject the connection if it offers a justified reason, but only within 15 days, and it must propose an alternative connection point, Economica.net reported. Otherwise, it will be obligated to connect the facility in one month at the latest after receiving the notification.

The rule was adopted as part of a new executive order, which hasn’t yet been formally published. The Romanian Energy Regulatory Authority (ANRE) was given six months to introduce the procedure. The so-called urgent ordinance transposes the EU’s Renewable Energy Directive RED 2.

Prosumer doesn’t have to use their electricity at photovoltaic system’s location

Furthermore, prosumers will get the right to install photovoltaic panels in several locations and consume the energy at a different place from where it is produced. The condition is to have a single supplier and for the facilities to be within the territory of the same distribution company.

When households, businesses or institutions have a power source for their own consumption, usually photovoltaics, they are called prosumers as they both produce and consume electricity.

In a stricter sense, prosumers use power from the grid when they produce too little for themselves while they deliver excess energy to the network when the output is too big for their needs. In the latter case, home batteries or electric vehicles can become an important part of the equation, especially when there is an option to sell the surplus at a higher tariff.

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 adds 19 1 GW wind power 2025 EU lags behind targets

Europe adds 19.1 GW of wind power in 2025 – EU lags behind targets

26 February 2026 - Germany accounted for 30% of European growth of 19.1 GW last year, according to WindEurope. Turkey remains dominant in the southeast.

drina buk bijela lake

Hydropower plants to transform upper Drina river into lake, say environmentalists

25 February 2026 - The planned hydropower plants on the upper course of the Drina will alter the ecosystem and local climate, the Center for Environment warned

croatia hadbooks licensing renewables hrote eihp

Croatia releases handbooks for permits for renewable energy investors

25 February 2026 - The Croatian Energy Market Operator (HROTE) and the Hrvoje Požar Energy Institute (EIHP) have issued two handbooks for investors

US LNG deals supply Central and Eastern Europe Balkans

US landing LNG deals to supply Central and Eastern Europe, Balkans

25 February 2026 - A group of European and Balkan countries agreed with the US to enhance gas supply, primarily by purchasing its LNG