Renewables

Romania plans to lease unproductive land for renewable energy projects

agricultural land romania renewable energy

Photo: Pexels

Published

January 8, 2026

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

January 8, 2026

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Romania is drafting legislation that would enable granting concessions for the construction of renewable energy plants on unproductive and degraded state-owned agricultural land. The initiative aims to establish fast-track areas for renewable energy projects, with all necessary permitting procedures limited to 12 months.

The legislation would allow the State Domains Agency (ADS), which manages state-owned agricultural land, to grant concessions on areas of land that are not suitable for agriculture, but can be used for green energy production, according to a report by Profit.ro. The initiative is part of the RePowerEU component of Romania’s National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP).

These areas should be officially designated following a mapping process to identify available land, subsurface, marine, or inland water areas needed for developing renewable energy power plants, as well as related grids and energy storage facilities, including thermal storage, to support achieving the 2030 renewable energy target.

The areas for renewable energy projects will be designated after a mapping process

The deadline to designate these areas is February 21, but it is unlikely to be met, given that a contract to procure the necessary geospatial data management software has been partially cancelled. The ADS has now launched a new tender for the geospatial data system, valuing the job at RON 7.7 million (around EUR 1.51 million), according to Profit.ro.

In the so-called “areas suitable for accelerating renewable energy projects,” the procedures for granting all necessary legal authorizations would not take more than 12 months in total, according to the report.

The Romanian Government has long planned to amend the law on the ADS to give it the authority to award concessions to public and private entities for the purpose of producing energy from renewable sources such as hydro, solar, wind, biomass, and geothermal, the news portal recalled.

State-owned power utility Hidroelectrica, the largest electricity producer in Romania, intended to build a photovoltaic park of 1.5 GW on thousands of hectares of land managed by the ADS. It would be the largest in Europe.

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

Curtailments negative prices slash solar power revenue Greece up to 60

Curtailments, negative prices slash solar power revenue in Greece by up to 60%

29 May 2026 - Solar parks in Greece with CfDs have lost an average 50% of revenue on a year-to-year basis in April amid negative prices and curtailments

World’s largest floating wind turbine installed in Chinese waters

World’s largest floating wind turbine installed in China’s waters

29 May 2026 - A 16 MW floating wind turbine has been installed in the South China Sea, which CTG claims is the largest, with the exception of platforms with double turbines.

hidroelectrica enevo solar park epc contract romania

Hidroelectrica signs turnkey contract with Enevo for 46 MW solar plant

28 May 2026 - Hidroelectrica has signed an EPC contract with Enevo Group for a solar power plant in southeastern Romania, with a peak capacity of 45.94 MW

serbia active byuers consumers linglong hbis solar ems application

Linglong, HBIS to become first major active electricity consumers in Serbia

27 May 2026 - Linglong and HBIS have submitted the first applications to connect solar power plants to the transmission system as active consumers