Difference between revisions of "Austria Energy Situation"

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Revision as of 11:29, 3 December 2013

Republic of Austria
Capital Vienna(48°12′N 16°21′E)
Official Languages(s) German
Government Federal Parliamentary republic
President Heinz Fischer
Chancellor Werner Faymann (SPÖ)
Total Area 83,855 km²
Population 8,414,638 (2011 estimate)
GDP (Nominal) $405 billion
GDP Per Capita $48,350
Currency Euro (EUR)
Time Zone CET (UTC+01)
Electricity Generation TWh/year (year)
Calling Code +43
Access to Electricity %
Wind energy (installed capacity) MW (year)
Solar Energy (installed capacity) MW (year)

Overview

Energy flow chart Austria 2009 (Source: Statistik Austria 2011)
Energy flow chart Austria 2009 (Source: Statistik Austria 2011)

Primary Energy Consumption

Renewable Energies[1]

Mandatory targets set by the Directive on the Promotion of the use of energy from renewable sources:

  • 34 % share of RES on the gross final energy consumption of energy in 2020.
  • At least 10% share of renewable energy in final consumption of energy in transport by 2020.

Indicative Target set by the RES- electricity European Directive from 20015:

  • 78.1 % share of RES on gross electricity consumption by 2010.

Indicative Target set by the European Biofuels Directive from 2003:

  • Biofuels consumption of 5.75% of final energy consumption of petrol and diesel use for transport in 2010.


Legal Framework on the Promotion of renewable energies in Austria:

  • Green electricity Act
  • Subsidy Directive
  • Green Electricity Regulation 2011



Electricity Situation

Supply

Demand

Energy Efficiency


Policy Framework, Laws, Regulations - Recent Developments

Energy Strategy[2]

In 2010, the two ministries (economy and environment) presented, after a lenghty stekeholder process, the Strategy Austria (engl Kurzfassung) (2).pdf Austria Energy Strategy (2010), which is founded on three principles:

  • Security of energy supply
  • Energy efficiency
  • Renewable energies


On the basis of these principles, Austria’s energy strategy is primarily directed at enhancing energy efficiency at every level where energy is supplied and consumed. Furthermore, it is necessary to improve security of supply and crisis provision for every source of energy and to strive to achieve as high a degree of energy autonomy as possible, while at the same time taking into account cost efficiency.

-> also see IEA (2007) report: Energy Policies of IEA Countries - Austria Review 2007


Institutional Set-up

Further Information


References