EPIA: Time for utilities to embrace solar

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Email

Utility companies should embrace solar energy rather than trying to block it, the European Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA) has said.

The trade group has also called for governments to overturn damaging retroactive changes to support mechanisms for PV or risk their own credibility and their countries attractiveness to investors.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Try Premium for just $1

  • Full premium access for the first month at only $1
  • Converts to an annual rate after 30 days unless cancelled
  • Cancel anytime during the trial period

Premium Benefits

  • Expert industry analysis and interviews
  • Digital access to PV Tech Power journal
  • Exclusive event discounts

Or get the full Premium subscription right away

Or continue reading this article for free

A number EU of countries, including France, Spain, Greece, Belgium and Italy have adjusted support schemes or introduced new charges for solar energy installations.

In the US and now in Europe, some utility firms have campaigned for cuts to subsidies and the imposition of grid usage charges.

Speaking at a press event in Brussels, EPIA policy director Frauke Thies said she would not speculate on the extent of European utilities influence behind the scenes.

“The only thing we know officially is that the Magritte Group of CEOs have been asking to stop support for renewables,” she said, referring to the group of European utility chief executives that has been lobbying against renewable energy subsidies. “That is surely a detrimental measure for  renewables and it ignores the energy transition that has to happen in Europe and that is going to happen. If you try to stop it and hold it up, it will just happen in a different way.”

Thies warned governments were putting measures in place that were resulting in bankruptcies, closures and job losses.

“Stopping the industry’s development in Europe means it will move to other countries. We already see the PV market is moving to other countries outside Europe where the conditions are better. This transition could continue if the EU chooses to put more hurdles in front of its development,” she said.

“The technology will continue to advance and the costs will continue to come down and inevitably PV will push back and return into the European market.”

“It would be a smoother strategy [for utilities] to participate in that and take part in the game with the PV industry and prepare the market progressively for this new technology. Make the adjustments needed, it’s clear that we need them. Make them progressively instead of blocking out the future now and then having solar come back from outside Europe at a later stage in a much more uncontrolled way.

“Solar is having an impact on the market and the share of PV in the electricity system is becoming higher. A large part of these investments is coming from individual homeowners, community projects, by new investors. The utilities have entered into parts of it but not so much yet,” said Thies.

Governments have a key role to play in removing artificial blockages to solar’s progress.

“It’s high time governments repair investor confidence and credibility and it means above all to revoke these retroactive measures and moratoria and provide a stable investment environment for the future,” Thies said.

Among the worst offenders is Greece which has, since 2012, hit the industry with a moratorium on new projects, a feed-in tariff reduction and two new taxes.

The EPIA wants new support mechanisms to clearly plot their future trajectory.

“They need to create stable, tailor-made, technology-specific frameworks with frequently scheduled revision of support that are based on transparent and predictable criteria,” Thies said.

Read Next

June 23, 2026
Australia's ACAP was ranked first globally for photovoltaics research quality in 2025 for the second consecutive year.
Sponsored
June 22, 2026
PV Tech spoke with Hanersun's chairman about the company's PV-storage strategy, global expansion and the Chinese market outlook.
June 22, 2026
Canadian Solar has announced its TOPCon 3.0 module, which has a power output of 670W and a conversion efficiency of 24.8%.
June 22, 2026
The Lego Group has started construction of a 116MW solar park in Billund, which is expected to become its “largest solar project to date.”
June 22, 2026
Energy platform Permanent Power Company has secured US$600 million in construction financing for a solar-plus-storage project in California, US.
Premium
June 22, 2026
Europe’s post-2022 solar surge has slowed, prompting a closer look at the structural bottlenecks that must be addressed to sustain the continent’s energy transition.

Upcoming Events

Solar Media Events
October 13, 2026
San Francisco Bay Area, USA
Solar Media Events
November 3, 2026
Málaga, Spain
Solar Media Events
November 24, 2026
Warsaw, Poland
Solar Media Events
April 20, 2027
Istanbul, Türkiye