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New plan for a pan-European electricity network

A new €104 billion plan for a pan-European electricity network would cost less than 1% of the consumers' total electricity bill. The plan - drawn up by the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) - would bring Europe a step closer to a pan-European grid. The plan comes as MEPs and Member States debate the European Commission's draft infrastructure package published in November 2011. The package proposes €9.1 billion for funding energy infrastructure projects considered "of common interest" (PCIs) and aims to speed up lengthy grid permitting processes.

"ENTSO-E's first official 10-year network development plan is a step towards a pan-European grid. But the relationship between this plan and the Commission's infrastructure proposals is unclear," points out Paul Wilczek, EWEA's Senior Regulatory Affairs Advisor. "ENTSO-E's plan now includes Europe's 2020 renewable energy targets in the scenario development, an important point that was missing in the previous "pilot" plan," he continued.

"This plan must now be taken as a blueprint for the future of Europe's grids, but it is not yet clear whether the Commission will consider supporting projects not included in ENTSO-E's plan. EWEA believes viable and useful projects should be supported even if they are not yet part of the latest ENTSO-E plan," he said.

ENTSO-E's plan also finds:
• One in three planned grid investment projects are currently being delayed due to lengthy permitting procedures - further underscoring the need for faster permitting procedures as outlined in the Commission's infrastructure package.
• Interconnection projects that integrate renewable energies could save the emission of 170 million tonnes of carbon - the equivalent to taking 86 million cars off the road in Europe.



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