2.6 C
București
duminică, martie 8, 2026

Energy – Electricity market: EESC proposes E-Facility to regulate where necessary and privatise where possible – Brief

1 min read (textul complet), articol clasificat de Robotul Minerva ca: In prelucrare

Creați-vă propriul

dashboard de știri

informația - cheie, 24/7

100+

FLUXURI

Free

Parcurgi informația mai rapid!

Acoperi top 100 surse externe!

Publicat de

Articole din aceeași sursa

- Advertisement -cresterea vanzarilor

Electricity market: EESC proposes E-Facility to regulate where necessary and privatise where possible   In its opinion issued in January, the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) discusses the future of the electricity market and advocates a combined model of state measures and market mechanisms: government regulation where necessary and private entrepreneurship where possible. The

Electricity market: EESC proposes E-Facility to regulate where necessary and privatise where possible

 

In its opinion issued in January, the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) discusses the future of the electricity market and advocates a combined model of state measures and market mechanisms: government regulation where necessary and private entrepreneurship where possible.

The electricity market has to be reformed in such a way that it does more than just meet the 2050 climate neutrality targets. It is vital to ensure security of supply, stable and affordable prices and the right to energy in order to protect vulnerable groups.

This – in a nutshell – is the content of the opinion on The future of the supply and pricing of electricity in the EU by Jan Dirx and Thomas Kattnig, adopted at the EESC’s January plenary session.

More specifically, the Committee advocates a model of government regulation where necessary and private entrepreneurship where possible and recommends an E-facility. This could take the form of a company set up by the government that acts as a market maker in the electricity market and so achieve the objectives of climate neutrality, security of supply and stable and affordable prices.

Reforming the electricity market

The opinion builds on the EESC’s previous work on electricity market reform and cross-border infrastructure planning and further examines proposals for new market organisation. The pre‑requisites for this new organisation are supply and demand, more private generators (such as prosumers and cooperatives) and more large storage capacities, and attractive local and regional flexible markets.

According to the Committee, the change needed in the electricity market should be carried out in three stages:

  • Phase 1 – from now to 2030

The E-facility will grow its portfolio with a mix of (non-CO2) power generation. During this period, power trading will take place on a day-ahead trading basis but the influence of the E-facility on the market will grow.

  • Phase 2 – from 2030 to 2040

The E-facility will achieve its market maker position and control an appropriate part of the supply side of the market through supply contracts. The role of day-ahead trading will adjust during this period accordingly.

  • Phase 3 – from 2040 to 2050

The E-facility will optimise the supply side of electricity to ensure, as from 2050, sustainable long-term supply of electricity with net-zero greenhouse gas emissions at stable and predictable prices.

Keeping energy affordable

In addition, it is important to consider other key options to balance supply and demand such as energy sharing and peer-to-peer trading. These have the advantage of inducing energy communities such as cooperatives and individual prosumers to play an active role in the energy transition.

Against this backdrop, the EESC reiterates its frequently‑shared message that small-scale electricity generation must be encouraged to keep electricity prices affordable for consumers and to increase grid flexibility options.

Moreover, the Committee believes that with the expected rise in energy prices and transmission and distribution tariffs, the cost of electricity in the run-up to 2030 and beyond will require governments to revisit their policy for taxing the supply of electricity to consumers. If taxation is not reduced to offset the increase in prices, electricity could very well become unaffordable for groups of Europeans and make EU companies less competitive on the international market.

28.01.2025 / Editor, Andreea Dragan

// Enable Bootstrap Tooltips
$(‘[data-toggle=”tooltip”]’).tooltip();

});

The diplomatic daily newspaper Nine O’Clock does not assume responsibility for the information received and published on the public website. The responsibility for the content lies solely with the issuer of the press release.

Girl in a jacket

The diplomatic daily newspaper Nine O’Clock cannot be held accountable for false information transmitted by the recipients of the press releases/announcements.

The diplomatic daily newspaper Nine O’Clock reserves the right not to publish press releases that contain inappropriate expressions or accusations and violations of the rights of other individuals, guaranteed by the Constitution of Romania.

The content of the website www.nineoclock.ro is intended for public information. Copying, reproduction, recompilation, modification, as well as any form of content exploitation from this website are prohibited. The use of the Comments section signifies your agreement to abide by the terms and conditions regarding the publication of comments on www.nineoclock.ro.

Girl in a jacket

Above you will find a visual representation of the article’s content, an automatic classification and a summary of it! Collecting data this way aims to promote and facilitate the access to information in compliance with intellectual property rights, and according to the terms and conditions of the source. (nineoclock.ro).

Read the full article here !

Fluxuri de știri

Articole recomandate

- Advertisement -dezvoltare afacere

Ultimele articole

Alege-ți fluxurile de informații!

Gratis!

 + Promovează-ți compania și oferta sa!