Industry: Political deadlock puts Spain’s clean energy shift at risk

September 19, 2019
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Email
Image credit: Chicadelatele / flickr

Politicians’ failure to form government pacts condemns Spain’s clean energy shift to further delays and uncertainty, the industry has warned as the country heads to fresh polls.

Clean energy body FER deplored Spain’s “missed opportunity” after new presidential elections were called this week for 10 November, following the floundering of the latest round of coalition talks.

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

The past few months of caretaker government and constant campaigning and voting paint a picture of “paralysis” that sits at odds with Spain’s recent declaration of a climate emergency, FER said.

Such an emergency, the foundation went on to say, can only be tackled with “stable government, bold and committed policies”, and laws consistent with the declaration’s “sense of urgency.”

The political standstill exacerbates the “decade of delays” Spain has witnessed compared to neighbouring countries, FER said, listing the policy fronts it sees as in need of urgent reform.

The foundation pointed at the need for a “deep reform” of the power sector to bring about net-zero emissions, which will require efforts to make power billing more transparent.

Coupled with a phase-out of coal and nuclear, Spain must swiftly act to set green taxes, promote electric vehicles, boost self-consumption and building energy efficiency, FER said.

Politics put brakes on Europe’s new PV hotspot

This week, acting president Pedro Sánchez blamed Spain’s fresh electoral contest on other parties, claiming his efforts to strike up a coalition “by all means possible” had proved unfruitful.

The political deadlock piles more uncertainty on the multibillion-euro renewables build-up proposed by Sánchez’s socialists earlier this year, part of a climate plan Spanish MPs have yet to ratify.

The plan – setting out installed PV targets for 8.4GW (2020) and 37GW (2030) – sees Spain move on from retroactive feed-in tariff (FiT) cuts, enacted in the early 2010s by prior governments.

Sánchez administration – still paying multimillion-euro fines over the FiT decision – has since acted to adopt major grid upgrades and promote self-consumption, overturning the ‘sun tax’ set in 2015.

PV operators have largely welcomed the new policy direction, calling for its mastermind – green transition minister Teresa Ribera – to retain her job after the elections.

The industry has urged however for a reform of Spain’s current power billing, which features a higher fixed element than elsewhere in Europe, to ensure self-consumption is not hindered.

A policy standstill is not likely to majorly impact the fortunes of Spain’s utility-scale PV segment, however, with foreign players delivering large projects on a PPA or fully merchant basis.

The prospects and challenges of European solar's new era will take centre stage at Solar Media's Large Scale Solar Europe 2020, to be held in Lisbon on 31 March and 1 April 2020

2 December 2025
Málaga, Spain
Understanding PV module supply to the European market in 2026. PV ModuleTech Europe 2025 is a two-day conference that tackles these challenges directly, with an agenda that addresses all aspects of module supplier selection; product availability, technology offerings, traceability of supply-chain, factory auditing, module testing and reliability, and company bankability.
10 March 2026
Frankfurt, Germany
The conference will gather the key stakeholders from PV manufacturing, equipment/materials, policy-making and strategy, capital equipment investment and all interested downstream channels and third-party entities. The goal is simple: to map out PV manufacturing out to 2030 and beyond.

Read Next

October 31, 2025
Solar Media Market Research looks into the the Section 232 ruling in the US, tackling the questions that need to be understood.
October 30, 2025
Scatec posted development and construction (D&C) revenues of NOK1,760 million (US$175.1 million) in the third quarter of this year.
October 30, 2025
Global net zero by 2050 is now “impossible” and the world is on course for temperature rises of 2.6°C, according to energy market analyst Wood Mackenzie.
Premium
October 29, 2025
Damage to solar from so-called Natural Catastrophe events is increasing as the technology expands its reach and weather conditions worsen.
October 29, 2025
Greenvolt and European Energy have finalised financial deals for solar-plus-storage projects in Denmark and Latvia.
October 28, 2025
GreenYellow plans to invest US$116 million in Poland over the next three years to expand its installed capacity and customer base.

Subscribe to Newsletter

Upcoming Events

Upcoming Webinars
November 12, 2025
10am PST / 1pm EST
Solar Media Events
November 25, 2025
Warsaw, Poland
Solar Media Events
December 2, 2025
Málaga, Spain
Solar Media Events
February 3, 2026
London, UK
Solar Media Events
March 10, 2026
Frankfurt, Germany