The Green Deal, National Energy and Climate Plans in Europe: Member States’ Compliance and Strategies
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Europeanisation Process: A Theoretical Context
3. European Union’s Policies for NECP’s
4. Member States’ Responses, Strategies and Compliance with the New Framework
4.1. Methodology of the Empirical Study
4.2. Evaluation of the Assessment Report
4.3. Member States’ Strategies and Compliance and Change
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parameters | EU Assessment | 2050 Targets | Scale |
---|---|---|---|
GHG emissions | Several countries placed aspiring objectives in areas not included in the EU’s emission trading system. Other countries foresaw that the national targets can further reduce GHG emissions more than their Effort Sharing Regulation (ESR) binding targets. | National targets are within the 0–40% range until 2030 vs. 2005 to meet the EU’s requirements. Minimum reductions in areas which are not included in the EU’s emission trading system. | B |
Renewable energy | RES amounts in the EU’s total energy mix could meet the 33.1% to 33.7% levels by 2030. | Minimum 32% until 2030. | AA |
Energy efficiency | A 29.7% [1176 Mtoe] reduction in primary energy and 29.4% in final energy consumption [885 Mtoe] until 2030. | Difference between the target, equalling to 2.8% primary energy consumption, and the 3.1% final energy consumption. | C |
Energy security | Malta, Portugal Luxembourg, France, and Lithuania submitted their targets (internal). Bulgaria, Italy, Estonia, Germany, Poland, Croatia, and Ireland scheduled more Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) capacities to secure gas market supply and/or increase competition (external). | COVID-19 has also affected energy security. More focus is required on the resilience of clean technology supply chains. The design and implementation of important clean technology procurement and logistics requires recovery and resilience plans. | B/C |
Internal energy market | Some Member States submitted suggestions and prioritised energy subsidies in their NECPs: 19 countries included content on fossil fuel subsidies, 12 set action plans to eliminate fossil fuels, and six reported a time line to end part of the fossil fuel incentives. | Even if countries adopt separate processes for integration, the EU strategy provides an action plan to adjust energy markets to climate neutrality needs and could be seen as a driver for implementing more resilient energy systems. | B/C |
Research & Innovation (R&I) | Little focus on R&I requirements for reaching climate and energy targets. National budgets dedicated to R&I in clean energy technologies are smaller compared to previous years. The national targets, with specific and clear 2030 and 2050 directions, are missing. In most cases, the NECP reports only financially support existing non-energy specific programmes. | A fresh strategic intention for clean energy R&I and rivalry is required to support European economies and assist innovation. This could help economies include innovation and new technologies. For both the EU and national R&I policies, local industrial policies should effectively fit the energy and climate targets. | C |
Scale: AA: Excellent; A: Very Good; B: Good; C: Below Target; D: Failure. |
Largely Addressed | Partially Addressed | |
---|---|---|
Austria | √ | |
Belgium | √ | |
Bulgaria | √ | |
Croatia | √ | |
Cyprus | √ | |
Czech Republic | √ | |
Denmark | √ | |
Estonia | √ | |
Finland | √ | |
France | √ | |
Germany | √ | |
Greece | √ | |
Hungary | √ | |
Italy | √ | |
Ireland | √ | |
Latvia | √ | |
Lithuania | √ | |
Luxembourg | √ | |
Malta | √ | |
Netherlands | √ | |
Poland | √ | |
Portugal | √ | |
Romania | √ | |
Slovakia | √ | |
Slovenia | √ | |
Spain | √ | |
Sweden | √ | |
Total | 10 | 17 |
Auditor | Categories | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
EU Compliance | N/A | Not | Partially | Largely | Fully |
EU Countries | Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Latvia, Luxembourg, Netherlands | Belgium, Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Malta, Poland, Romania, Slovenia, Slovakia | Austria, Cyprus, France, Germany, Italy, Ireland, Lithuania, Portugal, Spain, Sweden |
Strategy | Foot-Dragging | Fence-Sitting | Pace-Setting |
---|---|---|---|
Member State Compliance | Bulgaria, Croatia, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Poland | Belgium, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Lithuania, The Netherlands, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain | Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Sweden |
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Maris, G.; Flouros, F. The Green Deal, National Energy and Climate Plans in Europe: Member States’ Compliance and Strategies. Adm. Sci. 2021, 11, 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci11030075
Maris G, Flouros F. The Green Deal, National Energy and Climate Plans in Europe: Member States’ Compliance and Strategies. Administrative Sciences. 2021; 11(3):75. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci11030075
Chicago/Turabian StyleMaris, Georgios, and Floros Flouros. 2021. "The Green Deal, National Energy and Climate Plans in Europe: Member States’ Compliance and Strategies" Administrative Sciences 11, no. 3: 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci11030075
APA StyleMaris, G., & Flouros, F. (2021). The Green Deal, National Energy and Climate Plans in Europe: Member States’ Compliance and Strategies. Administrative Sciences, 11(3), 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci11030075