Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Topic from the European radio network Euranet Plus

Europe accelerates transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources

Bulgaria is working to achieve climate neutrality by 2050

Photo: EPA/BGNES

The energy transition is at the heart of our European Green Deal, the President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen said during the European Sustainable Energy Week. “With the European Green Deal we have proposed we have proposed the world’s most advanced blueprint to reduce emissions”, Ursula von der Leyen noted and added:

“Today our energy system alone is responsible for 75 percent of the EU’s greenhouse gas emissions. We need to decarbonize Europe’s energy mix. The good news is, we are on track to achieve this. In 2020, renewable power generation overtook fossil fuels in the EU. We want to build on this achievement and further speed up the use of renewables in Europe. That is why, for 2030, we propose to raise our renewables target to 40 percent of our energy.”


In Ursula von der Leyen’s words, the production of clean hydrogen is a perfect way to help reach our goal of climate neutrality. It will help to clean up some of Europe’s most polluting industries- steel, aluminum and heavy goods transport. This is why, by 2030, the EU aims to increase annual production of green hydrogen to 10 million tons. “It is high time to move hydrogen technologies from laboratories to factory floors and into people’s everyday lives”, Ursula von der Leyen said referring to the Green Hysland project on the island of Mallorca. It is the first hydrogen valley on a European island. It will generate and use at least 300 tons of hydrogen per year. Green hydrogen will fuel a fleet of fuel cell buses and rental vehicles on the island, generate heating for commercial and public buildings, etc. Another project Clear X, for instance, will help 38,000 in Eastern and Southern Europe to invest in and install renewable energy in systems like photovoltaic panels, batteries, pellet stoves and heat pumps, the President of the EC said further and added:

“Decarbonizing the way we produce energy not only helps our planet. It also provides benefits on other fronts. We have seen in recent weeks how crucial it is to reduce our dependency on fossil fuels such as gas, oil and coal. Currently we are facing a steep rise in energy prices. That has happened before, especially when economies are picking up and supply lags behind demand. Currently, Europe imports 97 percent of its oil, 44 percent of its coal and 90 percent of its gas. This makes our economy extremely vulnerable to price fluctuations in global energy markets and makes us dependent.”


By contrast, the production cost of renewable energies have decreased in recent years, which allows Europe to speed up the transition from fossil fuels to renewables. “Every kilowatt electricity produced with renewable energy helps us reduce our dependency on imports, making our economy more resilient”, Ursula von der Leyen said. In her words, such fundamental transitions are not easy and the Union is aware of the challenges that some industries are facing. That is why the least developed and most vulnerable countries need support. Ursula von der Leyen’s words, “the major economies should help these countries leapfrog beyond a fossil fuel-based economic development”.

“Bulgaria is completely determined to fulfill its commitments to the Paris Agreement”, this country’s Premier Stefan Yanev said during the COP26 UN Climate Chance Conference in Glasgow.


He noted that along with the other member states Bulgaria will work for reaching the goal of climate neutrality by 2050 and for the more ambitious goal of 55% reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2030. In Premier Yanev’s view, only a performing and vital economy can be transformed. “Therefore, the national features should be taken into account for a fair and proportionate approach”, Stefan Yanev said. According to him, Bulgaria’s efforts are focused on three main goals: accelerated further development of renewable energy sources and hydrogen; increase of the energy efficiency of the economy and sustainable mobility.

According to Bulgaria’s caretaker Deputy Premier for EU Funds Atanas Pekanov, Bulgaria will manage to fulfill the requirements to decarbonize the coal regions, meanwhile guaranteeing jobs and decent wages to the people employed in these regions. In his words, this will happen thanks to the projects and the reformed envisaged by this country’s Recovery and Resilience Plan and the funds earmarked by the Just Transition Fund. Bulgaria will use this money to modernize production facilities, increase qualification of workers and to invest in new energy technologies and energy efficiency.

English version: Kostadin Atanasov

Photos: EPA/BGNES


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Associate Professor Spas Tashev

There is a need for administrative autonomy of the regions in Albania inhabited by Bulgarians

The Bulgarian national minority in Albania is one of the largest in the country, according to data from the latest official population census. A total of 7,057 individuals identified as Bulgarians. For comparison, 23,000 people identified as Greeks,..

published on 11/18/24 2:20 PM

Starting today: Send your letter to Santa Claus in Stara Zagora

From today, residents of Stara Zagora, young and old, can send their letter to Santa Claus.  A letterbox has been set up in the foyer of the city's State Puppet Theatre to collect messages for Father Christmas. The cultural institution guarantees that..

published on 11/16/24 8:30 AM

A beautiful Bulgarian Christmas tree shines again at the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago

A Christmas tree with Bulgarian decorations has been placed in a central location at the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. For the fifth consecutive year, Bulgarians living in Chicago crafted the lavish decoration of the Bulgarian..

updated on 11/16/24 7:10 AM