We Need a European Renewable Energy Framework!
We Need a European Renewable Energy Framework!
The members of the European Delegates' Assembly of EUROSOLAR adopted and signed a resolution at their meeting in Bonn on August 24, 2013 - requesting from the European Commission and European governments of the EU member states to create a European renewable energy framework:
1 The EU must systematically direct its
energy policy towards achieving an energy future entirely
founded on renewable energy sources. To achieve this it is
necessary to decide at the political level on binding
minimum targets for renewable energy development and make
the relevant framework EU law.
2 The EU’s energy
laws, which up until now, have been focused on the EU
internal energy market are ripe for a complete overhaul and
must be further developed into a new ”Framework for the
move to decentralized energy in the EU energy market”.
Market regulations must accommodate the needs of the
decentralized supply of renewable energy. They must be
designed making sure EU states take the necessary action to
support the EU countries to continue on their path into
transforming the energy system throughout the EU.
3
A European Agency for Renewable Energy (EARE) must be set up
assisted by national and regional agencies for renewable
energy. These agencies are positioned the same. They share
the responsibility to develop networks, exchange best
practice and to coordinate definite development scenarios
for all European regions based on the potential each region
has.
4 Funding, support and preferences of nuclear
and fusion energy, plans for CCS or other fossil-fueled
power plant or mining technologies must end without further
delay. These budgeted funds have to be re-allocated to
support renewable energy research, development and market
entry.
5 EU-wide plans for nuclear and coal
technology exit must be established. Funding from the
EU-Structural Funds shall be made available in support of
the move to renewable energy systems.
6 Instead of
focusing on electricity superhighways trans-European
infrastructure projects for decentralized energy production
should be developed. The promotion of new infrastructure
projects such as highways and railroads is tied to the
increase in power plants running on wind, sun and biomass.
Cross-border and cross-sector projects like these promote
the expansion of renewable energy use, create a European
awareness, have the regions remain responsible for
centralized decisions – according to the subsidiarity
principle – while taking the burden from the transmission
lines through their regional and decentralized
approach.
7 From EURATOM to EURENEW: The preference
of nuclear energy in the EU that is still institutionally
established by the EUROATOM authority is a relic of the
1950s. Therefore, now, there should be a reform of the EU
policy to change this by setting a EURENEW contract
(European Contract for Renewable Energies) against the
EURATOM contract.
8 The EU must end its practice of
exporting obsolete fossil and nuclear
technologies.
Professor Peter Droege, Bonn, Germany
MR
Dipl. Ing. Wolfgang Hein, Vienna, Austria
Preben
Maegaard, Hurup Thy, Denmark
Milan Smrž, Prague, Czech
Republic
Ing. Franz Niessler, Vienna, Austria
Dr.
Ingrid Wagner, Vienna, Austria
Ole Vagn Christensen,
Thisted, Denmark
Dr. Axel Berg, Munich, Germany
Rosa
Hemmers, Bonn, Germany
Hermann Fellner, Freudenberg,
Germany
Dr. Fabio Longo, Marburg, Germany
Dr.-Ing.
Brigitte Schmidt, Triwalk, Germany
Judit Rónai, Sopron,
Hungary
Attila Ertsey, Hungary
László Somos,
Hungary
Francesca Sartogo, Rome, Italy
Dr. Luciana
Castellina, Rome, Italy
Professor Klaus Thiessen, Berlin,
Germany
Dr. Josep Puig, Barcelona, Spain
Professor
Tanay Sidki Uyar, Istanbul, Turkey
Dr. Bülent Ayyüce,
Turkey
Zafer Taskın, Turkey
Oleksandr Pepelov, Kyiv,
Ukraine
Irm Scheer-Pontenagel, Bonn, Germany
Oliver
Krischer, MdB, Düren, Germany
Jo Leinen, MdEP,
Saarbrücken, Germany
Hans Josef Fell, MdB, Hammelburg,
Germany
Ulrich Kelber, MdB, Bonn,
Germany
ENDS