A project to build a 185 MW solar power plant and a 50 MW energy storage system in Romania is available for purchase by interested investors. The project includes all permits and an electricity sales agreement (PPA).
Romania is one of the most important energy export countries of the future in Europe. Romania In western industrialized countries, green electricity and green hydrogen are considered the most important energy sources of the future. Romania is also defined by EU and USA as the number one energy export country to the Ukraine.
For 2030, the new target set by the Romanian government is 30.7 %, achievable by adding 7GW in renewable capacity. In 2020, the production of electricity in Romania came in the proportion of 12.4 %wind energy, 3.4 % from photovoltaic solar panels and 27.6 % from hydropower. In total, renewable energy production (wind, photovoltaic and biomass) accounted for 16 % of the total.
As the second largest power market in Central and Eastern Europe, Romania has the potential of attractive significant investments in the years to come in new generation capacities based on low carbon technologies.
The country is currently setting up a new primary legislative framework meant to facilitate investments under merchant market conditions, as a result of a full liberalization and alignment with the European Union (EU) electricity market reform. Policy wise, Romania has ambitious decarbonization targets and is looking to implement reforms in the sector, to attract sustainable investments coming from the public sector and private power producers as well as institutional investors and various EU funds under the Green Deal agenda.
In 2020, important steps have been taken to revive the renewable energy sector in Romania. In May 2020, the Ministry of Economy, Energy and the Business Environment announced the reintroduction of Long-term Bilateral Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) after these having been banned for almost eight years. The amendments to the Energy Law 123/2012 allowed PPAs for power-generation capacities that will be commissioned after 1 June 2020. These amendments are part of the commitment Romania made to the European. Commission to deregulate its electricity market as of 1 January 2021 to stimulate investments in new electricity-generation capacities.