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Photovoltaic Industry calls on EU to take action against Member States that backtrack on support for renewables

Date

17 Dec 2012

Sections

Innovation & Enterprise
Energy

In a letter to EU Energy Commissioner Günther Oettinger, more than 70 solar companies and associations say retroactive measures against support schemes are unfair and damage investment climate for renewables.

Brussels, 17 December 2012 - More than 70 companies and associations in the solar photovoltaic (PV) electricity sector have co-signed a letter to European Energy Commissioner Günther Oettinger, calling on the EU to take action against Member States that are enacting retroactive measures or moratoria on support schemes for renewables. The letter, sent by the European Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA), makes reference to recent or imminent action in several countries - including Belgium, France, Czech Republic, Italy, Spain, Bulgaria and Greece.

"Such measures seriously damage the investment climate in general and for renewables in particular, not only in the countries where they occur, but also throughout Europe," the letter states. "We therefore call on you to react strongly to these decisions and use, where appropriate, all the legal means the European Commission has to stop this trend, which threatens the climate of confidence needed in Europe to attract further investors."

The signatories also point out that these actions can "heighten the perceived risk in investments in renewables, and PV in particular, thus unnecessarily increasing the cost of capital for private operators. In the transition to a power sector that will require more CAPEX-intensive investments, retroactive measures will seriously endanger the achievement of 2020 targets."

Among the recent measures:

  • Czech Republic, end 2010, adoption of a 26% or 28% retroactive tax on PV investments realised between 2009 and 2010
  • Spain, end 2010, adoption of a retroactive measure on all existing PV investments
  • Bulgaria, September 2012, adoption of a discriminatory, abusive and retroactive grid access fee for systems commissioned since April 2010
  • Greece, November 2012, adoption of an up to 30% tax on revenues of PV systems already installed or to be installed in the future
  • Belgium (Flanders), December 2012, adoption of a retroactive grid access tariff for the use of the grid for PV systems benefiting from net-metering (<10 kVA)

Measures being considered:

  • Czech Republic, prolongation and increase in the tax on the PV investments
  • Spain, proposed 7% tax on revenues for electricity producers, discriminating against renewable energy producers and in favour of conventional players
  • France, proposed retroactive measure on the tariff level for large scale systems

To read the Open Letter to Commissioner Oettinger, click here.

To read a background document detailing the measures taken recently in several European countries, click here.           

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Note to editors:

EPIA - the European Photovoltaic Industry Association - represents members active along the whole solar PV value chain: from silicon, cells and module production to systems development and PV electricity generation as well as marketing and sales. EPIA's mission is to give its global membership a distinct and effective voice in the European market, especially in the EU.    

For more information:

Craig Winneker

EPIA, Head of Political Communications

Tel: +32.479.91.63.07

Email: c.winneker@epia.org 

 

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