The electricity  sector lobby  group Eurelectric is urging the European Commission to take “more decisive  action” to integrate renewable sources in the energy system and avoiding  conflicting national regulations distorting the market. 
  The calls  come ahead of the EU energy council this June, when EU states are set to agree  on how to complete the internal market. 
  Eurelectric  warns that policies in several EU countries - such as intervention in wholesale  and retail prices, taxation and national approaches to carbon pricing - are  jeopardising European market integration. 
  “As a  result, the role of the market is diminishing and the behaviour of market  participants is increasingly driven by regulatory measures or interventions,”  Eurelectric said in a statement. 
  The lobby  group urged the Commission to push EU states harder to align “overlapping and  conflicting” national regulations on a number of topics, such as renewable support  schemes, national CO2 taxes and regulated end-user prices, to make  sure that the internal energy market is completed by 2014. 
Key actions 
  Eurelectric now  calls on the Commission to put some key actions the top of the agenda at the  next European Council meeting on energy scheduled. 
  These key  actions include enforcing the third energy package, which has still not been  implemented in several countries (see EDEM 21 March 2013). 
  Regional  market integration should also be prioritised. Eurelectric said it was concerned  the current delay in developing a pilot integrated region in North West Europe (NWE)  would magnify the challenges posed by large volumes of intermittent generation coming  on line.  
  Easy  transmission of power across borders is a key part of backing up booming  renewable generation. 
  In January,  the director of the EU’s Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators, Alberto  Pototschnig, said delays to the NWE day-ahead coupling project, originally  expected to launch at the beginning of the year, could ruin plans to integrate  the electricity markets integration by 2014 (see EDEM 30 January 2013). 
  Eurelectric  also wants the Commission to remove measures creating market distortions such  as regulated tariffs and price caps that hinder the demand and supply balance.  
  In this  context, renewable operators should be have to take balance responsibility and  sell their electricity to the market without being over-compensated by support  schemes. 
  In November,  the Commission published a communication on how to make the internal market  work, warning that “nationally inspired policies” could jeopardise the 2014 market  integration target (see EDEM 15 November 2012). 
  Energy  ministers from EU states are expected to come to an agreement on the Commission’s  proposal for the internal energy market at a summit due on 7 June. 
(THE ICIS HEREN REPORTS - EDEM 17069 / 10 April 2013) |