World News15.04.2024
EC adoped of the strengthened Energy Performance of Buildings Directive

QAZAQ GREEN. The Commission welcomes on April 12 final adoption of the strengthened Energy Performance of Buildings Directive, another milestone of the European Green Deal.
This legislation sets the framework for Member States to reduce emissions and energy use in buildings across the EU, from homes and workplaces to schools, hospitals and other public buildings. This will help improve people's health and quality of life. The revised Directive sets ambitious targets to reduce the overall energy use of buildings across the EU, taking into account national specificities. It leaves in Member States' hands which buildings to target and which measures to take. It will boost the demand for clean technologies made in Europe, and create jobs, investment, and growth.
Each Member State will adopt its own national trajectory to reduce the average primary energy use of residential buildings, by 16% by 2030 and 20-22% by 2035. For non-residential buildings, they will need to renovate the 16% worst-performing buildings by 2030 and the 26% worst-performing buildings by 2033. Member States will have the possibility to exempt certain categories of residential and non-residential buildings from these obligations, including historical buildings or holiday homes. Citizens will be supported in their efforts to improve their homes. The Directive requires the establishment of one-stop shops for advice on building renovation and provisions on public and private financing will make renovation more affordable and feasible.
The Directive will boost Europe's energy independence, in line with the REPowerEU Plan, by reducing our use of imported fossil fuels. The revised Directive will make ‘zero-emissions' the standard for new buildings. All new residential and non-residential buildings must have zero on-site emissions from fossil fuels, as of 1 January 2028 for publicly-owned buildings and as of 1 January 2030 for all other new buildings, with a possibility for specific exemptions. The strengthened Directive contains new provisions to progressively phase-out fossil fuels from heating in buildings and boost the deployment of solar power installations, taking into account the national circumstances. Member States will also have to ensure that new buildings are ‘solar ready'. Subsidies for the installation of stand-alone boilers powered by fossil fuels will not be allowed as of 1 January 2025. It will also boost the uptake of sustainable mobility thanks to provisions on pre-cabling, recharging points for electric vehicles and bicycle parking spaces.
Better planning of renovations and technical and financial support will be crucial to trigger a Renovation Wave across the EU, and this is foreseen under the revised Directive. To fight energy poverty and bring down energy bills, financing measures will have to incentivise and accompany renovations and be targeted in particular at vulnerable customers and worst-performing buildings, in which a higher share of energy-poor households live.
German startup develops panel to produce hydrogen directly from sunlight
Uzbeks' income from solar energy sales grows ninefold
Belarus sets 38.7 MW renewable energy quotas for 2026
Solar power turns China's 'sea of death' highway into green corridor
Israel to build its largest-ever solar power plant in the Negev desert
Solar pensions and wind dividends: how South Korea is turning renewables into a rural development tool
Kyrgyzstan announces tender for land plots for construction of six small hydropower plants
ADB to invest $70 billion in Asia's power grids and digital infrastructure
Kazakhstan and World Bank discuss energy integration in Central Asia
Construction of 500 MW wind power plant begins in Karaganda region
50 MW solar power plant auction winner determined in Kazakhstan's Southern Grid Zone
Rooftop solar panels: Kyrgyzstan prepares rules for households and businesses
Europe’s rising heat: Can renewables provide the solution?
Winner announced for 100 MW solar auction in Kazakhstan
Chinese company ready to invest $1 billion in solar and wind generation in Kyrgyzstan
Meta to invest in space solar energy and ultra-long-duration energy storage
Tokyo pushing plan for world’s biggest floating wind power farm
Kazakhstan cancels 50 MW solar auction due to lack of participants
Tokayev ratifies Green Energy Corridor Agreement with Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan
China raises RES share to 60% of total installed capacity