WindEurope: Sweden Should Rethink Its Offshore Wind Policy

Authorities & Government

Sweden’s cross-party Energy Commission has recently agreed that Sweden should increase its renewables output by 18TWh a year toward 2030, though it stopped short of recommending any major reform of the current certificate scheme, according to WindEurope.

The country’s joint certificate scheme with Norway, which is used to finance renewables, is over-supplied leading to very low prices, according to WindEurope. Sweden relies on the same certificate scheme to support offshore wind, too.

The Energy Commission and the Swedish government have ignored calls for Sweden to introduce auctions for offshore wind, like most other countries in Europe, WindEurope said.

WindEurope CEO Giles Dickson addressed the annual conference of the Swedish Wind Energy Association (Svensk Windenergi) in Stockholm this week, where he discussed the benefits of substituting the current certificate scheme with auctions for offshore wind.

Dickson highlighted how auctions have reduced costs for both onshore and offshore wind across Europe.

He noted that this support framework can generate stable power prices and revenue streams for operators and investors.

He also discussed the expected contents of the European Commission’s proposals on the Renewables Package, which is due to be published on 30 November. He explained that the EC will require EU Member States to articulate their renewables deployment plans up to 2030 and push for linear deployment trajectories.

Sweden currently plans to delay most of its offshore wind build-out to 2028-30.