Greece has reduced the 2030 installed capacity targets for its solar photovoltaic (PV) and offshore wind plants in a new revised version of its draft national energy and climate plan (NECP), while it raised its target for onshore wind.
Greece now aims to have 13.4GW of solar PV capacity by 2030, according to its new NECP, down from the 14.1GW it envisaged in an earlier draft that was presented in January. But this remains significantly higher than the nearly 7.7GW that the country aimed for when it published its original NECP in 2019. The country is also targeting 40.3GW of solar by 2050, up by 5.8GW from January's draft.
And Greece now aims to reach 1.9GW of offshore wind capacity by 2030, down from 2.7GW in January's NECP. The country at present has no offshore wind farms, but plans to install 17.3GW of capacity by 2050. Despite downward revisions to these targets, the goal for onshore wind capacity was revised up, to 7.6GW by 2030 from 7.1GW in the previous revision.
Overall additions at this pace are set to help Greece's generation from renewables rise to 53.7 TWh/yr by 2030 from 22.2TWh in 2021. It is expected that renewables will account for 79pc of electricity consumption by 2030. And renewables are set to generate 44pc of total gross energy consumption, down from 45pc in January's initial draft.