INTIEAEuropean Union · Directive 2009/28/EC on the Promotion of Electricity Produced from Renewable Energy SourcesPolicyIn force

Directive 2009/28/EC on the Promotion of Electricity Produced from Renewable Energy Sources

The European Union Council of Ministers and the European Parliament adopted a directive on the promotion of electricity from renewable energy sources in the internal electricity market (Directive 2001/77/EC) in September 2001. The Directive allows establishing a green…

آخر تعديل قبل سنة واحدة.

العرض المستخرج للقراءة · النص الأصلي للأدلة الامتثالية

دورة الحياة

  1. نافذ
  2. آخر تعديل

Country / jurisdiction: European Union · Year: 2009 · Status: In force · Level: International · Type: Voluntary

The European Union Council of Ministers and the European Parliament adopted a directive on the promotion of electricity from renewable energy sources in the internal electricity market (Directive 2001/77/EC) in September 2001.

The Directive allows establishing a green electricity certificate system and accompanying measures to facilitate the market penetration of renewable sources in line with competition rules. The

Directive applies to the following renewable non-fossil energy sources: wind, solar, geothermal, wave, tidal, hydropower, biomass, landfill gas, sewage treatment plant gas and biogases. The target is to achieve 22,1% of electricity produced from renewable energy and 12% of renewables in gross national energy consumption by 2010. It foresees an evaluation by the Commission of the compatibility of the national targets with these global indicative targets.

The Directives RE targets for electricity for EU Member Countries:

Belgium: 6% in 2010 (compared to 1,1% in 1997); Denmark 29% (8,7% in 1997); Germany 12,5% (4,5%); Greece 20,1% (8,6%); Spain 29,4% (19,9%); France 21% (15%); Ireland 13,2% (3,6%); Italy 25% (16%); Luxembourg 5,7% (2,1%); Netherlands 9% (3,5%); Austria 78,1% (70%); Portugal 39% (38,5%); Finland 31,5% ( 24,7%); Sweden 60% (49,1%); UK 10% (1,7%);European Community 22% (13,9%)

Member States must publish a report setting national indicative targets for renewable electricity, and outlining measures, taken or planned, to achieve these targets, by October 2002 and every 5 years thereafter.

Member States shall take the necessary measures to ensure that transmission and distribution systems operators in their territory guarantee the transmission and distribution of electricity produced from renewable energy sources. They may also provide for priority access to the grid system of renewable electricity. Member States shall bring into force the laws, regulations and provisions necessary to comply with the Directive not later than 27 October 2003.

After the accession of the 10 new Member States in 2004 the following targets were adopted: Czech Republic: 8% in 2010 (compared to 3,8% in 1997); Estonia 5,1% (0,2%), Cyprus 6% (0,05%), Latvia 49,3% (42,4%), Lithuania 7% (3,3%), Hungary 3,6% (0,7%), Malta 5% (0%), Poland 7,5% (1,6%), Slovenia 33,6% (29,9%), Slovakia 31% (17,9%).

The target for the Community was changed to 21% (12.9%).

The targets after the 2007 enlargement were set as follows: for Bulgaria 11% (6%) and for Romania 33% (28%). The Community target was kept at 21% (13.2%).

Official source: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32009L0028:EN:NOT

المصدر

https://www.iea.org/policies/3471

الوثيقة الرسمية لدى الجهة التنظيمية. استشهد دائماً بهذا الرابط — لا بصفحة تفاصيل Vantage — في أدلة الامتثال.

ذات صلة في International

INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44708أخبارIn force

Solar Is the Cheapest Power in History, But States Are Retreating From It

A high-stakes push-and-pull is taking place in the United States clean energy sector as state-level laws, federal-level policy, and that infamous invisible hand all tug in different directions. A staggering amount of different legal actions on the part of the Trump administration, the judicial system, and state politicians have created an incredibly complex landscape for clean energy adoption across the country. And while the economics of renewables are looking better than ever, the political positioning of the clean energy transition is looking…

قبل 7 ساعات
INTEnergy Newsrigzone:https://www.rigzone.com/news/wire/oil_rises_as_iran_talks_are_delayed-19-jun-2026-183960-article/?rss=trueأخبارIn force

Oil Rises as Iran Talks Are Delayed

Oil prices rose as delayed US-Iran negotiations and slower tanker traffic through Hormuz renewed supply concerns.

قبل 8 ساعات
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44706أخبارIn force

Why Lunar Helium-3 Mining Still Can't Compete With Earth

When it comes to Helium-3, the biggest cost divide is between Earth and the Moon. Potential sources range from tritium decay and terrestrial helium wells on Earth to lunar regolith on the Moon. Today, Earth-based sources remain far easier and cheaper to access. This graphic, created by Visual Capitalist's Cody Good in partnership with Pulsar Helium, compares major potential sources of Helium-3 by cost, scalability, and accessibility. It’s part three of four in the Helium 3: From Theory to Opportunity series, delivering key He-3 insights for…

قبل 9 ساعات
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44704أخبارIn force

The Real Reason BP Is Retreating From the North Sea

BP is still considering a sale of all or part of its UK upstream portfolio, which could fetch around £2 billion ($2.7 billion), though talks of a sale to Ithaca Energy fell through earlier this month, according to reports by Bloomberg and the Financial Times. We think the information is credible. A sale would fit the group’s strategic direction, and the company is an outlier in the UK, where other majors have either sold down or formed joint ventures. At the same time, BP has been pushing aggressively on the exploration front since…

قبل 10 ساعات
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-news-44708أخبارIn force

Israel and Hezbollah Truce Gives Oil Markets a Reason to Pause

The Middle East's latest peace deal just got a peace deal of its own. Israel and Hezbollah agreed Friday to halt fighting in southern Lebanon after days of escalating clashes threatened to derail the fragile US-Iran peace process, reducing the risk that the first major test of the U.S.-Iran agreement would turn into its first major failure. Negotiations between Washington and Tehran are supposed to begin under a 60-day framework agreement designed to end the war, reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and eventually restore millions of barrels per day of…

قبل 10 ساعات