France's much-delayed energy transition bill passed a key
hurdle on Tuesday after a clear majority of the lower house of parliament
adopted a text that skirts the key nuclear issue but includes simplification
measures likely to boost renewables.
A cap on French nuclear power production at the current
level, approved last week, was the main point of contention in the bill
defended by Energy Minister Segolene Royal.
In a key victory for Royal, President Francois Hollande's
ex-partner and his fourth energy minister in three years, Green party MPs who
quit government last March also supported the bill. It now moves to the Senate,
before a final vote in the spring.
But beyond the nuclear cap, the text proposes a significant
cut in red tape for onshore wind, biogas and small hydropower production by
streamlining the authorization process along the lines of a trial held in seven
regions.
"This new dynamic is very clearly going to help us
catch up on our neighbors, since countries where renewables are booming are also
those with a single authorization system," Damien Mathon, managing
director of French renewable energy lobby SER, told Reuters.
LEGAL CHALLENGES
French renewables output has lagged that of neighbors such
as Germany or Spain in recent years, with industry experts blaming the complex
administrative system, uncertain legal framework and endless legal challenges
by anti-windpower protestors among the public.
Under the new system, legal challenges will be allowed only
in the two months after the granting of an authorization, down from six months.
France had 8,592 MW of onshore wind installations and 5,095
MW of photovoltaic at June 30, which accounted for 3.8 percent and 1 percent of
French energy consumption respectively in the first half of the year.
That compares with more than 35,000 MW of installed onshore
wind power capacity and nearly 37,000 MW of solar in Germany.
The law also paves the way for a new subsidy system for
renewable energy more in line with European Union directives that will
gradually move away from the current feed-in tariff system that guaranteed a
fixed selling price, adopting instead a system with a market price element.
This new system, scheduled to come into force before 2016,
should help to ensure that renewable energy producers have an incentive to
produce when wholesale power prices are high and carry out maintenance during
off-peak times, helping avoid overcapacity.
On less technical issues, the law also forbids retailers to
make non-recyclable plastic bags available in shops from 2016, bans plastic
kitchenware from 2020 and introduces sanctions against "planned
obsolescence" - the intentional limiting of a product's lifespan.
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