European
Nuclear Society
e-news
Issue 11 Winter 2006
http://www.euronuclear.org/e-news/e-news-11/austrian-presidency.htm
For the next six months, Austria will be responsible for pushing through the policy programme of the EU. The Austrian Presidency has indicated that under its stewardship energy policy will be based upon the fundamental principle of sustainability. Its main aim is “to achieve an economically optimal supply of energy sources and raw materials, taking account of security of supply, cost-efficiency and environmental and social acceptability.”
The Austrians will seek to achieve their energy policy objective in three ways:
By developing the statutory framework for energy and raw material supply
By developing appropriate instruments in support of a forward-looking energy and raw material planning programme
By maintaining the technical basis for energy and raw material supply, in particular to protect human life and health and people's living conditions
The focus of energy policy under the Austrian EU Presidency will, therefore, be:
To increase energy efficiency
To promote renewable energies
To improve the functioning of the internal energy market
Political agreement has already been reached on a common Council
position with regard to TENs. It seems likely that agreement will be reached
with the European Parliament at Second Reading. The final steps may occur during
the Austrian Presidency.
The implementation of an open, fiercely competitive internal market for energy
gives rise to the necessity to expand the required infrastructure for energy
networks EU-wide. The European Parliament and the Council have therefore adopted
guidelines for trans-European energy networks and identified projects for electricity
and natural gas pipelines of common European interest. As a result of the accession
of 10 new Member States, these guidelines for trans-European networks need to
be amended, taking particular account of the situation of the accession countries,
and provision for financing projects of common European interest. The proposal
for new guidelines contains projects of European interest whose implementation
would make an important contribution to an efficient and appropriately structured
energy network, and contribute to the security of supply for the whole of Europe,
as well as the further development of the European internal market. Agreement
now needs to be reached quickly with the European Parliament.
The European Commission will analyze the reports from the Member States and submit a summary report to the European Parliament and the Council by 31 December 2005 on the implementation of the directive in question.
The report will highlight progress in internalizing the external costs of electricity generated from non-renewable energy sources and the impact of public subsidies on electricity generation. It will also discuss Member States’ prospects of achieving the national indicative targets set in the directive, the global indicative target and any unequal treatment of energy sources.
The reports provided for in the directives mentioned above, which have to contain a detailed presentation of progress in creating the internal market for electricity and natural gas, have to be submitted by the European Commission to the European Parliament and the Council by 1 January 2006 at the latest.
Political agreement on a common position has already been reached. Efforts will be made to achieve an agreement with the European Parliament (EP) on second reading under the UK Presidency, but so far the positions of the Commission and the EP on the one hand and the Council on the other are widely divergent. Work on the proposed legal act may therefore continue into the Austrian Presidency.
The Action Plan has been announced for the final quarter of
2005.
The European Commission's Biomass Action Plan (BAP) is intended to contribute
to ensuring that the quantities of biomass required to achieve the EU’s
overall target for a doubling of the share of renewable energy sources in primary
energy consumption, from the current approximately six per cent to twelve per
cent by 2010, are actually mobilised.
The Biomass Action Plan will take the form of a Communication to the European
Parliament and the Council and contain recommendations for measures to increase
biomass use for energy purposes in the EU 25.
Official title: European Commission Green Paper on Energy Efficiency or Doing
more with less.
The Green Paper on energy efficiency was submitted by the Commission at the
end of June 2005.
download Green Paper on energy efficiency
In the framework of the EU's energy relations with non-member countries, the European Commission is expected to submit a Green Paper by the end of 2005 on security of supply, which will probably follow on from the issues in the 2000 Green Paper. The Commission is likely to place even greater emphasis in this paper on energy supply aspects in an overall European context, in particular cooperation with its most important supplier countries and regions, such as Russia and the Middle East.
The priorities in relation to external energy relations depend
on progress made under the UK Presidency.
It is important to note, however, that Austria was granted both the temporary
and permanent seat of the secretariat of this Community at the Ministerial Conference
of the South East Europe Energy Community on 13 December 2004, chaired by the
Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour (BMWA). The temporary secretariat has
already taken up its duties. It will be transformed into a permanent body when
an international treaty, which has already been negotiated, comes into effect
as planned in 2006. This means that a fourth major international energy institution
will be based in Vienna, alongside OPEC, the International Atomic Energy Agency
and the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Partnership (REEEP).
The conference “Energy Paths - Horizon 2050” (in which the Federal Ministry for Transport, Innovation and Technology will participate) is scheduled to take place on 16 March 2006 in the Auersperg Palace in Vienna: at this event, options for sustainable energy supply within this time horizon will be advanced and discussed, with the focus on the necessary technology choices this implies.
Security of supply and environmental compatibility are key
themes of European energy policy and also for the Austrian EU Presidency. The
technology policy measures concerned include, in particular, the preparation
of the Framework Programme of Research, Technological Development and Demonstration
and its sub-programmes; the establishment of structures such as the technology
platforms and joint technology initiatives.
Additional information on energy policy objectives can be found on the Austrian
Presidency’s official website at: www.eu2006.at/en/.
The website has no section specifically dedicated to R&D policy.
ENS NEWS will continue to report on the progress of energy policy under the current Presidency and report on all developments relating to research, including the 7th Framework Programme and the accession of Euratom to the GIF.
© European Nuclear Society, 2006