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South-East Europe Regional Consultation Meeting Bucharest, Romania 6 – 7 October 2016. Session II: Opportunities and Challenges in RE Deployment in the Region Romania’s intervention (5 min). Status of RE development in Romania.
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South-East Europe Regional Consultation MeetingBucharest, Romania6 – 7 October 2016 Session II: Opportunities and Challenges in RE Deployment in the Region Romania’s intervention (5 min)
Statusof RE development in Romania • Romania have already reached the 24% level required tomeet their national Europe 2020 targets for renewable energy out of gross energy consumption • The overall share of energy from renewable sources in gross final energy consumption in 2013 was 25.13% and in 2014 it was 26.27% • Significantly exceeds the share established for the indicative trajectory of 19.66% for 2013-2014 calculated in line with the provisions of Directive 2009/28/EC • In Romania, renewable energy capacities reached an installed power of 4,701 MW at the end of August 2016. • Wind farms – 2,962 MW • Solar farms –1,316 MW • Hydropower micro-plants – 316.7 MW • Biomass – 105 MW
Support scheme for renewables • The Romanian support system for renewable energy is based on green certificates and quota to renewable electricity producers and an obligation imposed on electricity suppliers to acquirea certain amount of green certificates • The Romanian Green Certificate Scheme has been operating since November 2011 • It awards green certificates (GC) to accredited plants using renewable energy sources (RES) for each MW of generation from RES for a period of up to 15 years from first generation under the scheme • The duration of the scheme remains unchanged – the scheme will expire on 31 December 2016 • NREAP status (National Romanian Renewable Energy Action Plan ) was elaborated in 2010 New Energy Strategy for 2030, with an outlook to2050 • Since 2007, Romania has an official Energy Strategy with an outlook to 2020 • In 2014, the Department of Energy (now the Ministry of Energy) decided to update and revise the Energy Strategy in light of the changed dynamics of the global, EU and regional energy markets • In November 2015, the new Government resumed the revision process started in 2014 and, building on that work, the Ministry of Energy has set the objective of elaborating a new strategic document until the end of this year: the Romanian Energy Strategy – 2016-2030, with an outlook to 2050
Proposed Actions • Finalize the intensive debate with all the actors involved on the RES market – to identify better solutions for the producers and also for the consumers • Study of impact under finalization • Elaborate a new project regarding the completion and amendments to the RES Law • Sustaining the promotion of the biomass, taking into consideration that this one represents 50% of whole renewable sources potential in Romania • Sustaining geothermal resources, taking into account that these kind of resources are less utilized in the present
Identified opportunities from the uptake of renewables • Contribution to international commitments on reduction of CO2 • Better and more local control of generation capacity, with potential to control direct flow of electricity to consumers, reducing system inefficiencies associated with large power generation capacity • Creation of new jobs • Creation of direct engineering capability, and indirectly growing local manufacturing and technical service economies • Contribution to more energy efficiency • Enhancing energy security together with traditional resources like coal, gas, which may be imported from areas of high risk • Improving state budget deficit, by decreasing imports of traditional energy resources and taxes paid by the investors
Ruxandra RalucaFlorescu Counsellor, Ministry of Energy Contact: E-mail: raluca.florescu@energie.gov.ro Tel: +4021 4079947 Address: SplaiulIndependentei, 202E, Bucharest, Romania www.energie.gov.ro