BETA

17 Amendments of Eva KAILI related to 2016/0382(COD)

Amendment 310 #
Proposal for a directive
Recital 65
(65) The promotion of low carbon fossil fuels that are produced from fossil waste streams can also contribute towards the policy objectives of energy diversification and transport decarbonisation. It is therefore appropriate to include those fuels in the incorporation obligation on fuel suppliers.
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 379 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 2 – paragraph 2 – point g a (new)
(ga) "Low carbon fuels" means liquid and gaseous fuels produced from waste streams, being gaseous effluents which discarded and which are generated as an unavoidable and not intentional consequence of the manufacturing or production and are not credited under other emissions reduction schemes.;
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 386 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 2 – paragraph 2 – point y
(y) 'waste heat or cold' means heat or cold which is generated as by-product in industrial or, in power generation installations or in non-industrial sources (such as hospitals, data centres and other buildings and) and which would be dissipated unused in air or water without access to a district heating or cooling system;
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 403 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 2 – paragraph 2 – point a a
(aa) ‘renewable self-consumer’ means an active customer as defined in Directive [MDI Directive] or a group of customers acting together, who consumes and may store and sell renewable electricity which is generated within his or its premises, including a multi-apartment block, a commerctheir premises, comprising at least a multi-apartment block, a residential area, a commercial, industrial or shared services site or a closed distribution system, including through aggregators, provided that, for non-household renewable self- consumers, those activities do not constitute their primary commercial or professional activity;
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 482 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 3 – paragraph 1
1. Member States shall collectively ensure that the share of energy from renewable sources in the Union'sir gross final consumption of energy in 2030 is at least 27their national binding target. The sum of the national binding targets corresponds to a Union binding target of at least 35%.
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 725 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 15 – paragraph 4 a (new)
4a. Member States shall ensure that their national, regional and local authorities set themselves and make public time-bound renewable energy targets, to be met via investments in and/or power purchase agreements with on-site, near-by or off-site projects.
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 733 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 15 – paragraph 5 – subparagraph 3
Member States shall, in their building regulations and codes or by other means with equivalent effect, require the use of minimum levels of energy from renewable sources in new buildings and in existing buildings that are subject to major renovation, reflecting the results of the cost-optimal calculation carried out pursuant to Article 5(2) of Directive 2010/31/EU. Member States shall permit those minimum levels to be fulfilled, inter alia, using a significant proportion of renewable energy sourceIn their calculation of the required cost-optimal levels of energy performance of buildings, Member States may use positive multiplying factors related to the energy from renewable sources produced by on-site installations which fulfil both energy conservation and energy production functions.
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 757 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 15 – paragraph 9
9. Member States shall remove administrative barriers to corporate long- tcarry out an assessment of the barriers to and the potential of the purchase of energy from renewable sources by corporate customers in their territories and shall set up an enabling regulatory and administrative framework for the growth of this new way to finance renewables and facilitate their uptake. In particular, such enabling framework shall comprise the possibility for all customers, individually or through aggregators, to sign one or more single- buyer or multiple-buyerm power purchase agreements to finance renewables and facilitate their uptakewith on-site, nearby and off- site electricity generating installations using renewable sources. Such power purchase agreements shall be deemed compatible with competition rules and with support schemes for renewable energy and shall not be subjected to burdensome procedures and excessive costs. Member States may allow a single power purchase agreement to be signed between an electricity generating installation using renewable sources and a corporate customer to cover the consumption of multiple sites belonging to the corporate customer.
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 828 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 19 – paragraph 2 – subparagraph 1
To that end, Member States shall ensure that a guarantee of origin is issued in response to a request from a producer of energy from renewable sources. Member States may arrIssuangce ofor guarantees of origin to be issued for non-renewable energy sources. Issuance of guarantees of origin may be made subject to a minimum capacity limitfor small installations may be simplified. A guarantee of origin shall be of the standard size of 1 MWh. No more than one guarantee of origin shall be issued in respect of each unit of energy produced.
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 843 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 19 – paragraph 2 – subparagraph 3
Member States shall ensure that no guarantees of origin are issued to a producer that receives financial support from a support scheme for the same production of energy from renewable sources. Member States shall issue such guarantees of origin and transfer them to the market by auctioning them. The revenues raised as a result of the auctioning shall be used to offset the costs of renewables supportTo avoid double compensation, when setting the level of financial support to production of energy from renewable sources that is granted outside of the tender procedures referred to in Article 4, Member States shall deduct the average value of guarantees of origin. In this case, the value of guarantees of origin should be public; to this aim the selling price of guarantees of origin should be notified to public authorities, which should ascertain the average selling price. Adjustments of the level of financial support shall not be made more than once per year in order not to negatively affect revenue stability and predictability.
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 877 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 19 – paragraph 13
13. Where energy suppliers marketAs of [date of entry into force] energy fprom renewable sources or high- efficiency cogeneration to customers with a reference to environmental or other benefits of energy from renewable sources or from high-efficiency cogeneration , Member States shall require those energy suppliers to use guarantees of origin to disclose the amount or share of energy from renewable sources or from high efficiency cogenerationduced from generating installations using renewable sources having entered into operation within the 10 preceding years shall receive guarantees of origin plus (GO+).
2017/07/04
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 915 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 21 – paragraph 1 – subparagraph 1 – introductory part
Member States shall ensure that final customers are entitled to become renewable self-consumers. Member States cannot discriminate on the basis of a customer being owner occupier, tenant or landlord. Member States shall not hinder final customers from becoming renewable self- consumers, by introducing, inter alia, cumulative or single-installation volume or capacity caps, burdensome and disproportionate procedures, charges, contractual arrangements and technical rules. Member States shall ensure that renewable self-consumers, individually or through aggregators:
2017/07/05
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 918 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 21 – paragraph 1 – subparagraph 1 – point a
(a) are entitled to carry out self- consumption and sell, including through power purchase agreements, their excess production of renewable electricity without being subject to disproportionate procedures and charges that are not cost- reflective; are entitled to consume their self- generated renewable electricity without it being subject to any charge, fee or tax; electricity storage systems combined with installations generating electricity for self-consumption shall not be subject to any charge. Direct taxation and double grid fees for stored electricity should be avoided;
2017/07/05
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 949 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 21 – paragraph 1 – subparagraph 1 – point d
(d) receive a remuneration for the self- generated renewable electricity they feed into the grid which reflects the market value of the electricity fed inis equivalent at least to the market price. Member States may set a higher threshold than the one set out in point (c).
2017/07/05
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 958 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 21 – paragraph 2
2. Member States shall ensure that renewable self-consumers living in the same multi-apartment block, oresidential area, and located in the same commercial, industrial or shared services, site or closed distribution system, are allowed to jointly engage in self- consumption as if they were an individual renewable self-consumer and can benefit from the rights described in paragraph 1 (a) to (d). In this case, the threshold set out in paragraph 1(c) shall apply to each renewable self-consumer concerned. Member States may set larger boundaries for collective self- consumption, such as a distribution grid segment. The self-generated electricity flowing through the cables of common areas of blocks and sites shall be considered as self-consumed electricity.
2017/07/05
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 970 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 21 – paragraph 3
3. TMember States shall allow the renewable self-consumer's' installation may bes to be owned or managed by a third partyies for installation, operation, including metering, and maintenance and shall confer to these installations the rights described in paragraph 1 (a) to (d). The self- consumers shall be allowed to contract with another supplier to cover their residual electricity demand. When self- consumers cease to occupy the premises and the new occupiers of the premises do not wish to use the energy produced by the renewable energy installation, Member States legislation shall ensure that that installation and the associated possible incentives can be transferred to other customers.
2017/07/05
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1171 #
Proposal for a directive
Article 25 – paragraph 1 – subparagraph 1
With effect from 1 January 2021, Member States shall require fuel suppliers to include a minimum share of energy from advanced biofuels and other biofuels and biogas produced from feedstock listed in Annex IX, from renewable liquid and gaseous transport fuels of non-biological origin, from waste-based fossillow-carbon fuels and from renewable electricity in the total amount of transport fuels they supply for consumption or use on the market in the course of a calendar year.
2017/07/31
Committee: ITRE