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European Parliament votes to boost deployment of renewable energy



The European Parliament voted Sept. 12 to boost the deployment of renewable energy, in line with the Green Deal and REPowerEU plans.



The update of the Renewable Energy Directive, already agreed upon between members of the European Parliament and Council, raises the share of renewables in the EU’s final energy consumption to 42.5 percent by 2030.



Member states should strive to achieve 45 percent.



The legislation will also speed up procedures to grant permits for new renewable energy power plants, such as solar panels or wind turbines, or to adapt existing ones.



National authorities should take no longer than 12 months to approve new renewable energy installations, if located in so-called "renewables go-to areas."



Outside such areas, the process should not exceed 24 months.



In the transport sector, renewables deployment should lead to a 14.5 percent reduction by 2030 in greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions by using a greater share of advanced biofuels and a more ambitious quota for renewable fuels of nonbiological origin, such as hydrogen.



Members of the European Parliament also secured that member states set an indicative target for innovative renewable energy technology of at least 5 percent of newly installed renewable energy capacity, as well as a binding framework for cross-border energy projects.



They pushed for stricter criteria on the use of biomass to ensure that the EU does not subsidize unsustainable practices.



Biomass harvesting should be done in a way that prevents negative impacts on soil quality and biodiversity.



"In our pursuit of greater energy independence and CO2 reduction, we have raised our renewable energy targets,” said Markus Pieper, the lead member of the European Parliament. “This directive is evidence that Brussels can be unbureaucratic and pragmatic. We have designated renewables as an overriding public interest, streamlining their approval process. Our focus encompasses wind power, photovoltaics, hydropower, geothermal energy, and tidal currents. Biomass from wood will remain classified as renewable energy. Under the principle of ‘positive silence,’ investments will be deemed approved in the absence of administrative feedback. We now urgently need an EU electricity market design and an immediate shift to hydrogen for a greener transition.”



The legislation was adopted with 470 votes to 120, with 40 abstentions.



It will now have to be formally endorsed by Council in order to come into law.



The legislative revision stems from the “Fit for 55” package, adapting existing climate and energy legislation to meet the new EU objective of a minimum 55 percent reduction in GHG emissions by 2030 (REDIII).



The proposed targets were further raised under the REpowerEU package, which aims to cut European dependence on fossil-fuel imports from Russia, following its aggression in Ukraine.



This law also brings new measures aiming to shorten the approval procedure for the deployment of renewables.

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