| 1 event, date neue energiepolitik für europa an eu energy security and solidarity action plan-...
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| 1Event, date
Neue Energiepolitik für Europa
An EU Energy Security and Solidarity Action Plan- Energy Package
DIng.Dr. Karl Kellner , Advisor TREN -Dir. DNew and Renewable Energies,En.Efficiency and Innovation , Europ.Commission
24 April 2009 , Energie - Enquete Vorarlberger Landtag ,Bregenz
| 2Event, date
Energy Policy for Europe
. 1st Strategic European Energy Review (SER) + Road map to renewables ( En Efficiency AP
Jan 2007Oct 2006)
. European Council March 2007
. Internal Market (3rd package) Sept 2007
. Strategic Energy Technology -Plan Nov 2007
. Climate & Energy Package ( ETS,RE, CCS)
.2nd Strategic European Energy Review : EU Energy Security and Solidarity Action Plan
.European Economic Recovery Plan
23.Jan 2008
13 Nov 08
26 Nov 08
| 3Event, date
ENERGY FOR A CHANGING WORLD
EXTERNAL RELATIONS
ILLUSTRATIVE NUCLEAR PROGRAMME (PINC)
SUSTAINABLE FOSSILFUEL TECHNOLOGIES
INTERNAL MARKET
REPORT ON FUNCTIONING OF INTERNAL MARKET
DG COMP SECTOR INQUIRY
PRIORITY INTERCONNECTION PLAN
PROGRESS REPORTRES ELECTRICITY
PROGRESS REPORTBIOFUELS
RENEWABLES RD MAP PROPOSAL FOR DIRECTIVE JAN
SUSTAINABILITY AND LOW-CARBON ECONOMY
ENERGY EFFICIENCY ACTION PLAN (19 OCT 2006)
JOINT COMMISSION/ HR /COUNCIL JUNE 2006 PAPER
AND COM PAPER OCT 2006
DIALOGUE WITH PRODUCERS:
OPEC-NORWAY-GCC-ALGERIA-CASPIAN BASIN
(BAKU PROCESS)
NEGOTIATION MANDATEFOR NEW AGREEMENT WITH RUSSIA
DIALOGUE WITH CONSUMERS:
CHINA, US, INDIA, JAPAN
ACTION PLAN 2007-2009
ENERGY PACKAGE2007
ENERGY POLICY FOR EUROPE
GREEN PAPER ENERGY
SPRING EUROPEAN COUNCIL 2007
R&D 7TH FRAMEWORK PROGRAMME STRATEGIC ENERGY TECHNOLOGY PLAN (Nov 07)
LIMITING CLIMATE CHANGE TO 2 °C
SPRING EUROPEAN COUNCIL 2006
| 4Event, date
2nd SER – focus on energy security - new political momentum to develop a European approach – completes 1st SER
Integrated approachIntegrated approachMutually reinforcingMutually reinforcing
Security of supply
Competitiveness
Sustainable Development
| 5Event, date
Primary energy consumption (Mtoe)
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
2100
2005 2010 2015 2020
BaselineModerate prices
High prices
New Energy PolicyModerate prices
High prices
| 6Event, date
Net imports of gas (Mtoe)
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
2005 2010 2015 2020
BaselineModerate prices
High prices
New Energy Policy
Moderate prices
High prices
| 7Event, date
The targets
-21% in ETS
(base year 2005)-20% GHG
emissions (from 1990)
-10% in non ETS
(base year 2005)
Electricity and heating
(>10 000 tCO2/yr)
+10% Biofuels and heating
+20% Renewables+20% Renewables
Electricity, biofuels heating
| 8Event, date
The targets
-21% in ETS
(base year 2005)-20% GHG
emissions (from 1990)
-10% in non ETS
(base year 2005)
Electricity and heating
(>10 000 tCO2/yr)
+10% Biofuels and heating
20% energy efficiency makes all targets easier to reach
+20% Renewables
Electricity, biofuels heating
| 9Event, date
2nd SER – main messages
.From a long term energy security viewpoint, the 20-20-20 strategy is the right direction to go in
.In the short to medium term, to prevent and manage supply crises- Europe’s market and solidarity can diminish
vulnerability - internationally, combined forces can be better than dispersed national actions EU Energy Security and Solidarity Action Plan
.Need to start looking beyond 2020 to 2050
| 10Event, date
EU ENERGY SECURITY AND SOLIDARITY ACTION PLAN
Infrastructures,diversification
Energy efficiency
Green Paper on EU energy networks
Communication on gas supply security
Directive
Proposal to revise oil stocks Directive
TEN-E 2002-6
Communication on offshore wind
RES Directive,Update nuclear progr.Communication
on energy efficiency
Proposals to revise Directives on energy performance of buildings, energy labelling, new Directive
on labelling of tyres
Communication on CHP, guidelines for implementation of Directive
Assessment of oil infrastructures
Externalrelations
Emergency oil stocks,Gas crisis response mechanisms
Indigenous energy resources
Supporting analyses: “Europe’s current and future energy position: demand, resources, investment”
| 11Event, date
Infrastructure needs and the diversification of energy supplies
Proposed energy security priorities:.Baltic Interconnection Plan .Southern gas corridor . Liquefied natural gas .Mediterranean energy ring .North-South interconnections within Central and South-East Europe .North Sea offshore grid
Green Paper on European energy networks, including idea of an EU Energy Security and Infrastructure Instrument
| 12Event, date
Oil emergency stocks and gas crisis response mechanisms
.Oil – proposal to revise EU emergency stocks legislation.Includes publishing aggregated commercial oil stocks on weekly basis .Commission to consult with a view to proposing a revised Security of Gas Supply Directive in 2010.Greater harmonisation of security of supply standards and predefined emergency measures at regional and EU levels needed.Obligatory strategic gas stocks? - more effective options may be available
| 13Event, date
Energy efficiency
.Nov 08 Energy Efficiency package focused on buildings and products, cogeneration/CHP. Sustainable Energy Financing Initiative, jointly with EIB; Covenant of Mayors an important instrument.2008 Communication on Greening of Transport.International Partnership on Energy Efficiency Cooperation to be launched.2006 Energy Efficiency Action Plan to be evaluated in 2009, with view to new Plan
| 14Event, date
Improving energy efficiency and realising the over 20% estimated savings potential in EU annual primary energy consumption by 2020 ( Energy Services Directive : 9% of final energy by 2016 )
Action Plan on Energy Efficiency – the Objective
| 16Event, date
Role of the Building Sector
40 % of EU’s energy use
36 % of EU’s CO2 emissions
Cost-effective energy savings potential: 28 % by 2020
Key EU legislation:
Energy Performance of Buildings Directive
(EPBD, 2002/91/EC)
16/12
| 17Event, date
Energy Performance of Buildings Directive EPBD (2002/91/EC)
Requirements - for Member States to specify and implement:
Minimum energy performance standards for new and for
existing buildings that undergo major renovationAn integrated methodology to rate the energy performance of
buildingsEnergy performance certificates for buildingsRegular inspections of heating and
air-conditioning systems
17/12
| 18Event, date
EPBD recast – What are the changes?Principles of existing EPBD requirements are KEPT – but
CLARIFIED and IMPROVED
Several ways of implementing details of the EPBD by
Member States exist AND SHALL BE UPHELD
Full respect of subsidiarity
principle and of economic feasibility
18/12
| 19Event, date
EPBD: recast (1)
Elimination of the 1000 m2 threshold for existing buildings when they undergo a major renovation
Eliminating/lowering of the threshold also for- Display of Energy Performance Certificates in public buildings- Assessment on installation of alternative systems for new build
Minimum energy performance requirements for newbuildings and major renovations:Benchmarking to achieve cost-optimal levels
Strengthening the role and the quality of
energy performance certificates
19/12
| 20Event, date
EPBD recast – What shall e.g. happen?
Energy
Class D
Energy
Class D
20/12
Energy Performance
Certificate
| 21Event, date
EPBD – recast (3)
Strengthening the role and the quality of inspections (HVAC)Stimulating the market entry of low/zero carbon
and energy buildingsAddressing the public sector to act as leading examplePenalties for non-complianceTimetable
Transposition: 31/12/2010
Implementation: 31/12/2010 and 31/01/2012
Co-decision
21/12
| 22Event, date
Impacts of the proposed EPBD recast
5 - 6 % saving of EU's total energy consumption
5 % saving of EU's total CO2 emissions
280,000 – 450,000 potential new jobs
Relatively low costs
Low/zero, predominantly negative CO2 abatement costs
22/12
| 23Event, date
Support Instruments will be continued and enhanced
Energy Demand Management CommitteeEPBD Concerted ActionMandate for 31 European EPBD CEN standards Buildings Platform - Build-up InitiativeIntelligent Energy Europe Programme projects
Financing: state aid exemptions + VAT reduced ratesEU's Economic Recovery Plan ( 26 Nov 08)
Structural Fund extension
European energy-efficient buildings Initiative
| 24Event, date
Making the best use of the EU’s indigenous energy resources
.Clear , binding objective for renewables, the EU's greatest potential source of indigenous energy. . Technology is crucial; next step in the Strategic Energy Technology Plan to be a Communication on Financing Low Carbon Technologies; including ways to support large scale demonstrations at EU level ( wind, solar, bio energy etc. long-term use of coal requires highly-efficient plants and wide availability of CCS - in EU and emerging economies).Berlin Fossil Fuel Forum to support indigenous EU fossil fuels, other fora ( Sustainable Energies etc)..Nuclear safety
| 25Event, date
Renewable energy promotion since 1997
sustainability – world leadership in halting climate change security of supply – oil & gas supply concerns, price volatility competitiveness – world-leading innovative industrial sector
• National targets for RE electricity (2001) and transport (2003)
Policy background Renewable Energies
Public discussion launched with the 2007 energy package: “20-20-20 in 2020”
2008: Commission proposals discussed and agreed by Member States and Parliament
• Renewable energy, emissions trading and targets, CCS
Entry into force of the new Directive in April 2009, to be implemented by Member States by October 2010.
| 26Event, date
Progress so far - patchy
AT BE BU CY CZ DK EE FI FR DE GR HU IE IT
electricity
recent growth
progress made
biofuels
recent growth
progress made
LV LT LU MT NL PO PT RO SK SI ES SW UK
electricity
recent growth
progress made
biofuels
recent growth
progress made
| 27Event, date
The renewables Directive
1. Sets mandatory national targets for renewable energy shares, including 10% biofuels share, in 2020
2. Creates flexibility by facilitating “joint projects” with Member States or third countries and “statistical transfers” between Member States to help reach targets cost effectively
3. Requires national renewable energy action plans
4. Requires reduction of administrative and regulatory barriers, improvements in provision of information and training and improves renewables’ access to the electricity grid
5. Creates a sustainability regime for biofuels
| 28Event, date
49%
13%
16%
13%
30%
18%
25%
16%
18%
20%
23%
17%
13%
40%
23%
11%
13%
14%
34%
15%
31%
24%
25%
14%
38%
15%
10%
RES share in 2020
BEBGCZDKDEEEIEELESFRITCYLVLTLUHUMTNLATPLPTROSISKFISEUK
Member States’ targets 1: Art. 3(1); Annex 1
Based on 2005 starting point, recent progress and a balanced sharing of the effort, weighted by GDP/capita
| 29Event, date
Member States’ targets 3: Art. 3(4) - transport
Minimum 10% share of RE in transport • (due to extreme dependency and high expected growth)
. RE in transport . energy consumption of petrol, diesel, biofuels in land transport and electricity
RE electricity in transport f(RE electricity share of EU or Member State) RE in electric road vehicles given energy content bonus of 2.5 biofuels from wastes, residues and second generation material bonus of 2 (c.f. Art. 21(2))
All excluding unsustainable biofuels
| 30Event, date
Member States’ targets 4: Art. 2 - Definitions
Wind, solar, geothermal, aerothermal, hydrothermal, ocean energy, hydropower, biomass landfill and sewage treatment plant gas and biogas
Bioliquids are liquid biomass used for electricity or heat generation Biofuels are liquid or gaseous biomass used in transport
The definition is intended to be broad enough to include new technologies as they develop (e.g. biomass includes fuels derived from seaweed, “ocean” includes tidal and wave power)
Nuclear power is not a renewable energy source (though it is low carbon)Peat is not a renewable energy sourceUnsustainable biofuels & bioliquids are not counted as a renewable energy source (criteria discussed later…)
| 31Event, date
Flexibility and cost effectiveness
• No sectoral targets set, no technology-specific requirements
• “Statistical transfers”: a Member State can agree to statistically transfer to another Member State a quantity of the renewable energy produced on its territory. (usually for a price/MWh).
• “Joint projects”: helping to build new installations or providing finance in some other way, Member States can help other Member States and third countries to build up renewable energy production capacity and share out the resulting production to also contribute to the financing Member State’s target.
If one Member State or a third country can produce renewable energy more cheaply than another, such “trades” improve cost effectiveness.
| 32Event, date
Co-operation mechanisms 1• Statistical transfers - Art. 6
Member States make an agreement amongst themselves Commission must be notified of quantity and price within 3 months of
the end of the year in question
• Joint projects between Member States - Art. 7 & 8 Member States agree a (new) “joint project” Commission must be notified of the Member States involved, the
relevant installation, the energy to be shared, the period covered. Within 3 months of the end of each year the Commission must be
notified of quantity produced by the relevant installation and the distribution to each Member State.
• In both cases the Commission adjusts the energy statistics in accordance with the notifications.
• EEA and Energy Community Treaty countries could participate following adoption of the Directive in the relevant acqui.
| 33Event, date
Co-operation mechanisms 2
• Joint projects between Member States and third countries - Art. 9 & 10 Member State(s) may agree a (new) “joint project” for production of
electricity from renewable energy sources in a 3rd country
• Electricity must be proven to be consumed in the EU
• The energy produced may only receive investment aid (i.e. not production support) in the country of production
The “EU consumption” condition may be relaxed by the Commission if inter-connection capacity between a Member State and a 3rd country is to be built (construction beginning by 2016; operational by 2022) for a quantity of electricity which will be imported in accordance with the above conditions.
Following notification, the Commission will adjust the energy statistics.
| 34Event, date
Co-operation mechanisms 3
• Joint support schemes - Art. 10 & 11
Member States may agree to join or coordinate their national support schemes (e.g. a common feed in tariff or green certificate/obligation regime).
The renewable energy produced under such conditions is considered “pooled” and shared out either as a “statistical transfer” or according to an agreed distribution rule of which the Commission has been notified.
n.b. Commission expects national support schemes to continue to evolve and will facilitate increasing cooperation and coordination.
| 35Event, date
Renewable Energy Action Plans 1 – Art. 4
National plans to be submitted by Member States by 30 June 2010 containing
• national sectoral targets and trajectories (electricity, transport heating& cooling)
• adequate measures to achieve the overall target
• means of cooperation between national, regional and local authorities
• planned statistical transfers or joint projects To help prepare such plans
• by 30 June 2009 the Commission will produce a template which Member States must use to prepare their plans
• by 31 December 2009 Member States must publish “forecast documents” containing estimates of future renewable energy production in excess of their trajectory, the potential for “joint projects”, expected domestic/import production split.
| 36Event, date
Renewable Energy Action Plans 2 - Template
Annex VI contains minimum requirements for the template:• Data to be reported includes expected final energy consumption,
sectoral targets and trajectories
• with a breakdown by technology and of the expected energy efficiency and savings in each sector
• Details of measures to remove administrative barriers, accelerate authorisation procedures, reinforce renewable energy integration into the energy system and the better exploitation of biomass resources in particular
• Explanations of the support schemes to be used in each sector to drive development of renewable energy
• Planned use of statistical transfers/joint projects and domestic/import production split.
Commission is currently elaborating the details, format etc.
| 37Event, date
Administrative measures 1 – Art. 13 Member States shall ensure that
• authorisation, certification and licensing procedures for plants and infrastructure are streamlined, proportionate and necessary
• with simplified procedures for small or decentralised projects where appropriate
• responsibilities for such procedures are defined and coordinated between local, regional and national bodies, with transparent timetables and provision of information on processing and assistance
• rules for these procedures are objective, transparent, proportionate and non discriminatory
• associated administrative charges are transparent and cost related
Technical specifications of equipment (for support) shall be clearly defined, based on European standards and should not constitute a barrier to trade.
| 38Event, date
Administrative measures 2 – Art. 13 Member States shall recommend that
• local and regional bodies ensure the use of renewable energy when planning, designing and building industrial and residential areas and infrastructure
Member States shall introduce appropriate measures in building regulations and codes to increase the use of renewable energy in buildings• including minimum levels of renewable energy in buildings
• public buildings should be “show cases”
Member States shall promote energy efficient renewable energy equipment • e.g. efficient conversion of biomass, compliance with eco labels for
heat pumps and solar equipment…
| 39Event, date
Guarantees of origin are certificates proving electricity is
generated from renewable energy sources; based on existing regime
• must be issued upon request• used and cancelled within 12 months• independent national competent body for (electronic) issuing, transfers and
cancellations to ensure accuracy, reliability and fraud resistance • mutual recognition
Standardised
• 1MWh, date & country of issue & unique identification n°.• date of energy production; age, location of installation
• optional for heating and cooling
Consumer information: guarantees of origin 1
| 40Event, date
Grid access and operation 1 – Art. 16
Member States shall take the appropriate steps to
• develop all infrastructure to ensure its secure operation as it accommodates more electricity from renewable energy sources
• (transmission and distribution grid infrastructure, intelligent networks, storage facilities, interconnections)
• accelerate authorisation procedures and co-ordinate with administrative and planning procedures
Subject to maintaining grid reliability and safety, Member States shall
• guarantee transmission and distribution of renewable electricity• provide priority or guaranteed grid access • ensure priority dispatching (where dispatching occurs)• grid and market operational measures minimise curtailment of electricity
from renewable energy sources
| 41Event, date
Grid access and operation 2 – Art. 16
Member States shall require TSOs and DSOs to
• set up and make public rules of cost bearing and sharing• (connection, reinforcement, improved operation, grid code implementation
costs)• based on objective, transparent non discriminatory criteria
• provide new producers with the comprehensive and necessary information for connection
• (connection cost estimates, reasonable and precise timetable for processing application and for connection)
Member States shall review and improve these rules by 30 June 2011 and every two years thereafter
• Member States may require TSOs and DSOs to bear costs
| 42Event, date
Directive enters into force in May 2009, to be
implemented by Member States by October 2010 In 2009 the Commission will
produce the template for national plans, report on biomass sustainability criteria, refine biofuel sustainability criteria
In following years the Commission will Report on indirect land use change, on areas with low agricultural
GHG emissions, sustainability verification methods, and add methodologies for new RE technologies
All these aspects are evolving in conjunction with associated policies inc. emissions trading, eco-labels, buildings directive and other energy efficiency measures
What next?
| 43Event, date
• Renewables policy developed with related policies
• strategic energy review, emissions trading, emissions effort sharing targets, CCS, energy efficiency measures, state aid guidelines & single market developments, CAP changes, biomass/forestry developments, trade concerns, macroeconomic crisis…
• Thorough discussion of issues and options during legislative negotiations
Renewable energy will be one sector of the economy where there is policy stability: Targets, trajectories, sectoral growth, technology split, support
measures, transparent planning and expectations
• The strongest basis yet for consistent growth in renewable energy production; yielding significant GHG reductions, energy supply diversification and technological innovation
Conclusions
| 44Event, date
Europe preparing its energy future now
.EU’s 2020 agenda set out first steps in transition to high-efficiency, low-carbon energy systems.Deep structural changes, radical technological shifts require choices today.Wide consultation on possible longer-term policy objectives eg decarbonising electricity supply by 2050.Roadmap towards a 2050 Energy Policy to be prepared, in SET-Plan framework
| 45Event, date
For the climate and energy package http://ec.europa.eu/energy/energy_policy/index_en.htm
EENERGY FOR A CHANGING NERGY FOR A CHANGING WORLDWORLD
EC, DG TREN: RES policy & RTD programmes http://ec.europa.eu/energy/res/index_en.htm
EC, DG TREN: agencies, partners, programmes e.g. http://www.managenergy.net
EC, Executive Agency for Competitiveness and Innovation (EACI) Intelligent Energy - Europe
http://ec.europa.eu/eaciCalls for proposals FP7 Calls for proposals FP7
http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/dc/
http://cordis.europa.eu/eu-funding-guide/home_en.htmlhttp://cordis.europa.eu/eu-funding-guide/home_en.html
Further informationFurther information
| 46Event, date
Increasing
Dependency
A Low Carbon , high efficiencyFutureA Low Carbon , high efficiencyFuture
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION !!THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION !!