EU4Energy boosts renewables integration across Eastern Partnership countries
November 17, 2025

EU4Energy boosts renewables integration across Eastern Partnership countries


On 14 November, the Energy Community Secretariat, in cooperation with the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the European Commission, concluded a two-day regional dialogue at the IEA’s headquarters in Paris.

Conducted as part of the EU4Energy programme, the event brought together government and regulatory representatives from the Eastern Partnership countries to build a shared understanding of how to make renewables a central part of the region’s power markets. 

“Across the Energy Community region, Contracting Parties are steadily advancing integration with the EU’s electricity market – a process that, through the Energy Community framework, can progress even before full EU membership,” the Energy Community said in a press release. “This includes several Eastern Partnership countries – namely Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine – whose recent progress on market reforms and renewable energy deployment shows how renewables growth and integration are advancing in parallel.”

According to the Energy Community, 2024 marked a turning point for Moldova, with the Contracting Party’s first-ever renewable energy auctions awarding 165 MW of solar and wind capacity, and a second round now under preparation that will introduce battery storage for the first time. 

In Georgia, trial operations of the new day-ahead electricity market began in 2024, laying the foundation for future market coupling with the EU and enabling renewables to compete more effectively in a liberalised market. 

Meanwhile, Ukraine (synchronised with the ENTSO-E system since 2022) continues in 2025 to expand cross-border electricity trade and invest in renewable generation, despite the challenges posed by the ongoing war.

Last year, 2024, also marked Azerbaijan’s first 100 MW renewables auction, signalling an accelerating shift toward renewables and creating the groundwork for prosumer participation and grid-flexibility mechanisms. 

In October 2025, Armenia reached an important milestone of 1 GW of solar deployed nationwide, four years ahead of its initial schedule.  

The discussions in Paris focused on how policies and regulatory approaches can better support the participation of renewables, storage, and consumers in electricity markets and grid operation – ensuring that clean energy, flexible demand, and new technologies can all play a more active role in balancing supply and demand. Examples from across Europe illustrated how digitalisation and smart grids can make it easier to integrate increasing shares of solar and wind power, helping electricity systems become cleaner, more reliable, and more flexible.

The EU4Energy initiative is funded by the European Union and is jointly implemented by the Energy Community Secretariat (EnCS), the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the Council of European Energy Regulators (CEER).

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Press release



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