Energy and climate planning
On 8 July 2020, the EU Commission published aStrategy on Energy System Integration. Sector integration means linking the various energy carriers - electricity, heat, cold, gas, solid and liquid fuels - with each other and with the end-use sectors, such as buildings, transport or industry.
The Strategy foresees 40% of all residential and 65% of all commercial buildings to be heated by electricity in 2030. This should be done mainly through heat pumps.
EHPA supports the linking of sectors, which will boost heat pumps and allow the optimization and decarbonization of the energy system as a whole.
The EU has a target for net zero emissions by 2050, which is enshrined under its 2018Climate Law.
EU Member States have developed both national climate and energy plans and long-term strategies onto achieve the greenhouse gas emissions reductions needed to meet their commitments under the Paris Agreement and EU objectives.
EHPA is strongly supportive of high targets on greenhouse gas reduction, renewable energy and energy efficiency since heat pump technologies offer solutions as of today to meet these targets.
To meet the EU's energy and climate targets for 2030, EU Member States had to establish anational energy and climate plan(NECP) for 2021 to 2030.
Each country must submit a progress report every two years, with the EU Commission keeping track of EU progress overall.
The NECPs were submitted in 2021 and will be updated in 2023. The 2021 versions lacked ambition with regard to measures inFavorof smart, efficient and renewable heating and cooling in general.
EHPA supports national action to create a morefavorableregulatory environment for heat pumps.
This news from:www.ehpa.org