Danish response to the
Commission’s
public consultation on the draft ETS State
Aid Guidelines
In general, the Danish government can support many of the steps taken in relation to
modernize the State Aid Guidelines for indirect cost compensation for energy-intensive
industries under the EU ETS (ETS Guidelines).
It is important that the revision of the ETS State Aid Guidelines support a cost-effective
transition towards climate neutrality in the EU. The objective of the Commission to de-
carbonise the EU energy systems within the framework of The European Green Deal as
a mean to combat climate change and to promote a more sustainable economy and
society as a whole could therefore be supported.
Aside from this, the Danish government has some comments to the proposal. The com-
ments that are described more in details below focus on the following topics:
The “future” of the state aid guidelines
The list of sectors included in annex II
Access to renewable energy supply contracts
Fulfilling the 25 percent target.
The future of the state aid guidelines
While acknowledging the importance and necessity of addressing carbon leakage
risks
–
and ensuring a level playing field with third countries with less climate ambi-
tion than the EU
–
it is still important to emphasise, that the guidelines cannot, and
has never been intended to, be used as an opportunity to delay the efforts, Member
States should put in place in relation to a transition to energy supplies based on
renewable energy. The state aid rules was for that reason in ETS phase III also
designed as a transitional measure only.
Denmark and a considerable number of other EU Member States have joined the
Powering Past Coal Alliance, a coalition of ambitious states, corporations and organ-
isations who deem it possible and urgent to ban fossil fuels from electricity produc-
tion within a limited number of years. These ambitions to phase out coal in the elec-
tricity production points to the fact that it will be a likely possibility in the European
Union to provide electricity supplies based on renewable energy to industries within
a period that reaches not very far beyond ETS phase IV.
On those grounds, the Danish government would again urge the Commission to de-
sign the guidelines in a way, which prepares the phasing out of ETS state aid as a
temporary measure by the end of ETS phase IV in 2030 or soonest possible there-
after
–
and ensure that aid schemes are devised, conducted and completed on a
strict and temporary basis. This can e.g. be achieved by increasing the pace, at
which the maximum aid intensity factor is reduced from 75 percent in 2020 to a zero
or near-zero percentage by 2030.
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