Renewables

Albania to roll out obligatory zero-emission standards, solar panels for buildings

Albania obligatory zero emission standards solar panels buildings

Photo: iStock

Published

November 6, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

November 6, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Albania drafted a law on the energy performance of buildings including the obligation to meet zero-emission and nearly zero-emission standards and use solar energy.

Starting in 2026, all new and renovated buildings in Albania will need to comply with minimum energy performance requirements and use renewable energy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The Ministry of Infrastructure and Energy issued the draft law for public consultation, saying it aims to achieve climate objectives and promote sustainability in the energy and construction sectors.

Improving energy efficiency in buildings will result in significant energy savings, reducing costs for consumers and reducing dependence on fossil resources, it added.

From 2027, all new buildings owned by public authorities must be emission-free, according to the draft. The same rule would apply from 2028 for all new public buildings and for all new buildings in 2030.

The legislation will align Albania’s framework with the European Union, the ministry said.

Investors will need to consider the use of renewable energy, cogeneration systems and heat pumps and the introduction of district heating and cooling

Starting in 2026, all new buildings would need to use solar energy. The draft law stipulates that investors must consider the use of renewable energy overall, cogeneration systems and heat pumps and the introduction of district heating and cooling.

Elements that are repaired or replaced must comply with minimum energy performance requirements as much as possible, the ministry added.

New non-residential buildings and those undergoing significant renovation should include infrastructure for charging points for electric vehicles and spaces for bicycles, the draft reads. Public institutions would be obligated to display the energy performance certificate in a visible place in their buildings.

The new standards would include the installation of indoor air quality monitoring devices in new and renovated buildings.

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

Turkish geothermal power plant operator drill for geothermal lithium

Turkish renewables firm to drill for geothermal lithium

26 July 2025 - Margün Energy intends to search for lithium in geothermal water in western Turkey, where it took over a 12 MW geothermal power plant

eu smart meters acer list slovenia croatia

Slovenia tops EU list for most smart power meters, Croatia among laggards

25 July 2025 - At the top of the list of European Union member states with the highest number of smart meters are the Scandinavian countries and Italy

serbia wind farm plandiste nis met dubravka djedovic

Government of Serbia interested in taking over Plandište wind project

25 July 2025 - Plandište is one of the projects that obtained feed-in tariffs under the first quota of 500 MW for wind power plants in Serbia

Project 81 MW solar park on coal mine in Montenegro

Project underway for 81 MW solar park on coal mine in Montenegro

24 July 2025 - The Government of Montenegro gave a provisional green light for a solar power plant of 81.1 MW in peak capacity on coal land in Pljevlja