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Directive 2001/77/EC

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Directive 2001/77/EC
European Union directive
TitleDirective 2001/77/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 September 2001 on the promotion of electricity produced from renewable energy sources in the internal electricity market
Made byEuropean Parliament and Council
Journal referenceL283, 27 October 2001, pp. 33–40
Other legislation
Replaced byDirective 2009/28/EC
Repealed

Directive 2001/77/EC is a European Union Directive for promoting renewable energy use in electricity generation. It is popularly known as the RES Directive.

The directive, which took effect in October 2001, sets national indicative targets for renewable energy production from individual member states. As the name implies, the EU does not strictly enforce these targets. However, The European Commission monitors the progress of the member states of the European Union – and will, if necessary, propose mandatory targets for those who miss their goals.

These objectives contribute toward achieving the overall indicative EU targets, which are listed in the white paper on renewable sources of energy. Regulators want a 12% share of gross renewable domestic energy consumption by 2010 and a 20% share by 2020.

The directive was superseded by Directive 2009/28/EC, published on 23 April 2009.

National targets

The following table lists the indicative targets for each of the 15 original member states, and for comparison the share of renewable electricity in 1997 as well.

Country 1997 share 2010 target
Belgium 1.1% 6%
Denmark 8.7% 29%
(Germany) 4.5% 12.5%
Greece 8.6% 20.1%
Spain 19.9% 29.4%
France 15% 21%
Ireland 3.6% 13.2%
Italy 16% 25%
Luxembourg 2.1% 5.7%
Netherlands 3.5% 9%
Austria 70% 78.1%
Portugal 38.5% 39%
Finland 24.7% 31.5%
Sweden 49.1% 60%
United Kingdom 1.7% 10.0%
European Community overall 13.9% 22%

See also

External links

This page was last edited on 5 January 2024, at 15:31
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