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Energía solar

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La fotovoltaica, imparable en las principales economías del mundo

 La energía fotovoltaica está creciendo en el mundo a un ritmo medio del 40% desde 1990, que se incrementará hasta el 66% en 2020. A medida que la demanda y el mercado fotovoltaico mundial se estabilizan, en las principales economías del mundo la fotovoltaica constituye uno de los rasgos que identifica a los sistemas productivos más innovadores y competitivos.

Fundación Renovables reclama una verdadera política energética común


La Fundación Renovables ha preparado un documento coincidiendo con la campaña de las elecciones al Parlamento Europeo 2014, en el que afirma que el cambio climático “nos ha cargado de razón para hacer lo que en cualquier caso había que hacer: optar por un escenario económico bajo en carbono, en energía y en recursos naturales con un sistema energético sostenible enmarcado en una Política Energética Común (PEC) para la UE”. En el documento, FR defiende que para conseguir dicho objetivo, son imprescindibles mayores competencias de la UE en el sector energético.

Anpier promoverá una iniciativa popular para favorecer la implantación de un modelo energético seguro, sostenible y transparente

 ANPIER, Asociación Nacional de Productores e Inversores de Energías Renovables, promoverá una iniciativa popular -al amparo de Ley Orgánica 3/1984, de 26 de marzo, Reguladora de la Iniciativa Legislativa- para favorecer la implantación en España de un modelo energético seguro, sostenible y transparente que esté en armonía con las líneas marcadas por la Unión Europea (Estrategia 2020) y que contemple los modelos implantados más avanzados del mundo, como el desarrollado por Alemania, cuyas planta nucleares cesarán su actividad dentro de 9 años.

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Bulgaria MPs Ok 20% Renewable Energy Tax, Defy Protests

 Bulgaria's parliament has approved conclusively a highly controversial new tax on revenues of renewable energy producers amid a wave of protests against it. 

The proposal was supported Thursday morning by 116 MPs, 38 voted against and 28 abstained. 

The proposal to introduce a new 20% tax on the revenues of photovoltaic plants and wind farms through changes to the Renewable Energy Sources Act was submitted by Volen Siderov, leader of nationalist party Ataka, during the second-reading vote on Budget 2014 by the parliamentary committee on budget and finance.

On Saturday, representatives of the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP) and liberal party Movement for Rights and Freedoms (DPS) announced that they would back the measure in Parliament.

In a media statement issued Monday, the Ministry of Economy and Energy (MIET) defended vehemently the proposal citing the Czech Republic as an example, where the tax rate on preferential prices there amounted to 26-28%, while in Greece - to 30%.

MIET informed that Italy, Spain, Romania and the UK had also introduced measures to reform the support schemes for renewable energy.

Citing guidelines of the European Commission, MIET noted that "preferential prices are applied for the purpose of maintaining low risk levels for investors in new technologies.

With the development of technologies, they acquire a substantial share of the total output, so this type of protection is not necessary and must be terminated within a certain period."

The Ministry added that an EU Directive required Bulgaria to reach a 16% share of electricity produced from renewable energy and the country already boasted a 15% share.

MIET also argued that the tax would be a step towards overcoming the sharp discrepancies between prices of different producers operating on the regulated market, adding that it would also have a balancing impact on the electricity system.

Meanwhile renewable energy producers have staged numerous protests against the proposed tax.

They have complained that many of them had developed their businesses through loans from banks and the imposition of such a tax on their turnover would substantially complicate their situation.

In a media statement, the Bulgarian Photovoltaic Association defined the decision for the new tax as scandalous, opaque, discriminatory, and illegal.

Industry representatives insisted that the measure would discourage foreign and local investors from the most successful sector of the Bulgarian economy which had absorbed over EUR 4 B of investments and created thousands of jobs.

Nikola Nikolov from the BPVA underscored that the tax was unconstitutional and the state offered no service in exchange for it.

In an interview for the Bulgarian National Radio, Ruslan Stefanov from the Center for the Study of Democracy argued that the measure would trigger a wave of bankruptcy of renewable energy companies and referred to the proposal as an example of opaque governance.

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