The Committee on Industry, Research and Energy adopted the own-initiative report by Niki TZAVELA (EFD, EL) on the Energy Roadmap 2050: a future with energy, in response to the Commission Communication on the subject.
Objectives of the EU2050 Energy Roadmap: Members stress the importance of the EUs energy policy amidst the economic and financial crisis, and the role that energy plays in spurring growth and economic competitiveness and creating jobs in the EU. The Commission is asked to propose post-2020 strategies and a policy framework for 2030, including milestones and targets on greenhouse gas emissions, renewable energy and energy efficiency, with the aim of establishing an ambitious and stable legal and regulatory framework. Since defining energy targets for 2050 and the intervening period assumes pan-European governance, Members propose the adoption of a strategy that allows Member States to cooperate under the Roadmap in a spirit of solidarity the creation of a European Energy Community. They note that the 2030 policy framework must be defined within a timeframe that is appropriate for providing investor security.
Key Elements of a long-term strategy: welcoming the Commissions view that increased deployment of renewables, energy efficiency and energy infrastructure are the no regret options, regardless of the specific path chosen to achieve a decarbonised 2050 energy system, the report invites the Commission to:
· explore a combined high renewables and high energy efficiency scenario, noting that a choice made about which path to take would help increase investment certainty;
· take decentralised generation explicitly into account in future estimates of renewable energy in the EU energy mix, and map financial, technical and infrastructural obstacles that hamper the growth of decentralised generation in Member States.
Energy efficiency: Members stress that the EUs long-term energy-efficiency policy should take the reduction of energy use in buildings as a central element, calling on Member States to adopt ambitious, long-term building renovation strategies as required by the Energy Efficiency Directive. The current quality of building renovation needs to be substantially scaled up in order to significant reduction of energy consumption of the existing building stock by 80 %, relative to 2010 levels, by 2050.
The report calls, furthermore, for greater attention to be paid to the heat and cooling sectors in the transformation of the energy system, noting that this sector represents about 45 % of the final energy consumption in Europe.
Renewable energy: Members make a series of recommendations on increasing uptake. Stressing the importance of stable regulatory frameworks, both on an EU as on a Member State level to stimulate investments, the committee is concerned by Member States increasingly abrupt changes to support mechanisms for renewable energy, and it calls on the Commission to monitor carefully the implementation of the Renewable Energy Directive and to take action if necessary.
Infrastructure: energy infrastructure projects are characterised by vast upfront investment and a 20-60 year operational lifetime. The current market environment is highly unpredictable, and Members note that investors are hesitant when it comes to energy infrastructure development, stressing the need to promote new strategies and innovative instruments in this regard.
Specific energy sources: noting that all types of low-carbon technology will be needed to achieve the goal of decarbonising the EUs energy system, Members agree that natural gas will play an important role, in the short to medium term, in the transformation of the energy system. They also note that carbon capture storage (CCS) could play a role on the road to decarbonisation by 2050 and they advocate strategies to this effect.
Social dimension: lastly, special attention should be given to energy poverty and employment, and Members add that the Commission, Member States and local authorities should find tailored solutions with a special emphasis on low-income and vulnerable households.