A preliminary analysis conducted by SolarPower Europe suggests that the EPBD could drive the installation of 150 to 200 GW of rooftop solar in the next years, leveraging the potential of EU’s rooftops. This is assuming that 60% of public buildings are suitable and fall under the scope of the EU Solar Rooftop Standard. The EPBD will tap into the vast potential of rooftops, estimated at 560 GW by the EU Joint Research Centre earlier this year.

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Jan Osenberg, Senior Policy Advisor at SolarPower Europe said: “Like the essential integration of smoke detections years ago, this new law propels rooftop solar toward becoming the standard. More buildings, businesses, and citizens will have access to clean, renewable, economical solar energy.”

Mandate that all new building be solar-ready

The new law mandates that all new buildings be solar-ready, making it more straightforward and appealing to seek solar. According to Bloomberg NEF, proactive solar standards (as seen in some EU countries) can boost return on investment by 8 to 11%, compared to retroactive installations. Additionally, the Solar Standard is set to empower a wider portion of society, easing obstacles to solar adoption in multi-apartment buildings. 

The EU Solar Rooftop Standard applies to new non-residential and public buildings from 2027, to existing non-residential buildings undergoing major renovations by 2028 , to new residential buildings from 2030  and on all suitable existing public buildings by 2031. The Solar Rooftop Standard will most importantly unlock the potential of large rooftops such as those installed on offices, commercial buildings, or car parks. Certain buildings such as agricultural and historic structures may be excluded.

Rooftop PV as gateway to smart electrification

Osenberg continues:  “Rooftop PV needs to be the gateway to smart electrification. Solar-powered heating and cars will reduce the costs of sustainable homes. Smart pairing of rooftop solar with EVs and heat pumps will also reduce the impact on the grid, and even provide direct support to the grid by providing flexibility services at times of grid stress. This will require removing the bottlenecks to electrification and ensuring grid operators can tap into this flexibility potential.”

Total rooftop solar capacity in Europe stood at more than 170 GW at the end of 2023 and is expected to grow to 355 GW by the end of 2027. In addition to the obligatory solar installations under the Solar Standard, the growth of rooftop solar on homes is also likely to increase, as citizens seek to shield themselves from fossil price volatility. (hcn)

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The pause in workforce growth is due to slowing solar installations, as the impacts of the energy crisis are lessened, and the roll out of solar is hampered by limited flexibility* in the system. At the upstream end of the value chain, European solar manufacturing has been facing significant challenges in the last 12 months, leading to production pauses and workforce reduction.

Walburga Hemetsberger, CEO of SolarPower Europe said: “Solar can offer more than 1 million workers a meaningful, quality career in their local communities. These job opportunities can’t be taken for granted. We urge the new EU leadership to improve regulatory conditions to add more solar, support EU solar manufacturers, and develop Europe’s strategy around solar skills.”

1 million solar jobs by 2027

The annual EU Solar Jobs Report has revised last year’s projection that the EU would reach 1 million solar jobs by 2025. Instead, the report identifies the need to reach this size of workforce by 2027, in order to deliver 88.5 GW of annual solar installations by then, in line with the continent’s competitiveness, climate, and energy security goals.

Also see: Record annual growth of renewable jobs in 2023

At a national level, there has also been movement. Reflecting the 104% growth in its solar market from 2022 to 2023, Germany’s solar workforce surged to become the largest workforce in Europe, with 154,000 solar workers. Poland, previously the largest, fell to second place with 113,000 as its job-intense residential market slowed. Spain is in third place, with the emphasis on its less job-intense utility-scale sector delivering more GW capacity for fewer workers.

Also interesting: Central and Eastern Europe increasingly in the solar gigawatt class

To ensure that the solar workforce remains ready to deliver the continent’s primary decarbonisation tool through the second half of the decade, the EU Solar Jobs Report makes a number of policy recommendations:

Policy recommendations

1. Assessing the exact need for workers and skillsets at national level. 

2. Creating a pan-renewable energy career path.

3. Including an electrification skills strategy under the upcoming EU Electrification Action Plan.

4. Boosting the visibility and allure of STEM education and careers.

5. Retraining workers from legacy-fossil industries. 

6.  Supporting the circulation of skills in Europe.

7. Developing solar-specific training within electrical professional training. (hcn)





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A preliminary analysis conducted by SolarPower Europe suggests that the EPBD could drive the installation of 150 to 200 GW of rooftop solar in the next years, leveraging the potential of EU’s rooftops. This is assuming that 60% of public buildings are suitable and fall under the scope of the EU Solar Rooftop Standard. The EPBD will tap into the vast potential of rooftops, estimated at 560 GW by the EU Joint Research Centre earlier this year.

Jan Osenberg, Senior Policy Advisor at SolarPower Europe said: “Like the essential integration of smoke detections years ago, this new law propels rooftop solar toward becoming the standard. More buildings, businesses, and citizens will have access to clean, renewable, economical solar energy.”

Mandate that all new building be solar-ready

The new law mandates that all new buildings be solar-ready, making it more straightforward and appealing to seek solar. According to Bloomberg NEF, proactive solar standards (as seen in some EU countries) can boost return on investment by 8 to 11%, compared to retroactive installations. Additionally, the Solar Standard is set to empower a wider portion of society, easing obstacles to solar adoption in multi-apartment buildings. 

The EU Solar Rooftop Standard applies to new non-residential and public buildings from 2027, to existing non-residential buildings undergoing major renovations by 2028 , to new residential buildings from 2030  and on all suitable existing public buildings by 2031. The Solar Rooftop Standard will most importantly unlock the potential of large rooftops such as those installed on offices, commercial buildings, or car parks. Certain buildings such as agricultural and historic structures may be excluded.

Rooftop PV as gateway to smart electrification

Osenberg continues:  “Rooftop PV needs to be the gateway to smart electrification. Solar-powered heating and cars will reduce the costs of sustainable homes. Smart pairing of rooftop solar with EVs and heat pumps will also reduce the impact on the grid, and even provide direct support to the grid by providing flexibility services at times of grid stress. This will require removing the bottlenecks to electrification and ensuring grid operators can tap into this flexibility potential.”

Total rooftop solar capacity in Europe stood at more than 170 GW at the end of 2023 and is expected to grow to 355 GW by the end of 2027. In addition to the obligatory solar installations under the Solar Standard, the growth of rooftop solar on homes is also likely to increase, as citizens seek to shield themselves from fossil price volatility. (hcn)





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