Title: Bernard Snoy, Director,
1SEECP Conference for Parliamentarians, Social
Partners and NGOs Bucharest, 11-12 October 2004
Creation of the Energy Community of South
Eastern Europe
Bernard Snoy, Director, Working Table II
Economic Reconstruction, Development and
Cooperation -
2What is the Stability Pact for South Eastern
Europe?
. Adopted on 10 June 1999 in Cologne . Provides
framework for co-ordination of over 40 countries
and organisations . Political instrument for
long-term conflict prevention . Aims to
strengthen peace, democracy and economic
prosperity in South Eastern Europe (SEE) .
Stability Pact Beneficiaries
3The Stability Pact is involved in the energy
sector in SEE through its sponsorship of the
Athens Process. The Athens Process, led by the
European Commission, aims at creating an Energy
Community of South Eastern Europe and to its
integration into the EU internal energy market
4Potential Regional Electricity Markets within the
EU
5Energy Community of South East Europe
Will have as members EU Member States Austria,
Greece, Hungary, Italy and
Slovenia Regional Members Albania, Bosnia
Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatie, FYRoM,
Romania, Serbia Montenegro,
Turkey, UNMIK-Kosovo Observer
Status Moldova
6Why is SEE Region important?
- Reconstruction and transition after war
- Next stage of EU expansion
- Diversification of routes for energy supply to
Western Europe
7The Athens Process or ECSEE
- Involves the adoption by the SEE countries of the
EU Electricity, Gas and Environmental Directives,
involving among others, - opening of access for cross-border trades in
electricity and gas - the setting up in each country of an
independent energy regulator - unbundling of generation, transmission and
distribution (at least in terms of management) - comply with regulations concerning large
combustion plants, environmental impact
assessment and sulphur content
8The Athens Process aims at creating a Energy
Community SEE Three steps
Inclusion of Gas Market at 8th December 2003
ministerial meeting
First Athens Memorandum of Understanding on
electricitywas signed in 15th Nov 2002 in Athens
UCTE
DK
Non UCTE
UPS
NL
PL
SynchronousBorders
D
B
UA
L
CZ
I zone
SK
REMmember
MD
A
F
CH
HU
RO
SLO
REMobserver
HR
II zone
BIH
SaM
BIH
BG
P
I
E
MK
AL
GR
TK
Negotiations on Int. legally binding agreement
started in July 2004
9Objectives of the ECSEE
- Larger market and predictable regulatory
environment will attract investment and financing - Level playing field with fair conditions for all
groups of market participants - Increased reliability and security of systems
- Greater efficiency and more competitive prices
10Objectives of the ECSEE (continued)
- Enhanced transparency, greater market discipline
and lower corruption - Regional framework for determining critical
investments - Reduction in overall investment needs thanks to
enhanced national and regional strategies - Better integration of economic, energy and social
policies
11Time Scale and Requirements
- Athens Nov 2002 MoU requirements
- National legislation, following Electricity
Directive, to create regulatory commission, and
transmission system operator, by June 2003 - Opening of the market to all non-domestic
consumers by June 2005 - Athens Dec 2003 MoU requirements
- National legislation, following Directives on
electricity, gas, and environment, by 1 July 2005 - Strategy for establishing the market by June 2004
- Monitoring of progress in June 2004 and annually
thereafter (benchmarking) - Implementation dates (e.g. for full market
opening) for SEE may be later than the dates
applying to Member States
12How does the EU work with SEE countries on the
ECSEE?
- DG Transport and Energy works of the European
Commission has been leading the Athens process
and ensures currently its Secretariat. - Ministerial Council once a year
- Permanent High Level Group (PHLG) (Ministries of
Energy) meetings 3-4 times a year - Meetings of Regulators quarterly (SEEER)
- Meetings of TSOs quarterly (SETSO)
- Athens Forum twice a year (PHLG/SEEER/SETSO)
- President of the Athens Process rotates round
countries of region every six months (in the
first half of 2004 Albania, currently Austria) - Working language is English
- Only a single State level organisation can
participate from each country
13Donor and IFI Coordination
- Official coordination by the EC
- Donor and IFI meetings twice a year on regional
issues, more frequently in some countries eg
Bosnia and Herzegovina - Donors involved EC, WB, EBRD, EIB, USAID CIDA,
IES, Italy, France, Germany, Switzerland, the
Czech Republic, France and Greece. The UK is
associated through the work of EBRD - Last meeting 2 June in Athens during the 3rd
Energy Week
14ECSEE Treaty
- Will replace 2003 Athens MoUs with legally
binding conditions and timetable for full market
opening - Will include regional regulatory authority
- Will cover relations regarding import from third
countries - Negotiations started on 14 July in Permanent High
Level Group - Meeting of Prime Ministers Advisors on 15 July
- Second negotiating session on 22 September
- Signing expected at the end of this year or early
in 2005
15How is progress measured?
- Benchmarking measures reform tasks achieved by
target deadlines - Benchmarking is being set up for all countries in
the market - Separate benchmarking for
- Ministry of Energy or equivalent
- Regulatory Authority
- Transmission System Operator
- Benchmarks cover
- Legislation existence and appropriateness
- Institutions numbers of staff, qualifications,
budget, scope of activities - Performance what has the organisation done
since it was set up
16What progress has been achieved?
- Nearly all countries have adopted legislation
to implement Directive 92/96/EC. - In two steps, they will have implemented
2003/53/54/EC Directives - Regulators are in place (some not so
independent) - Tirana Declaration on the SEE Regulators Board
for Electricity and Gas - TSOs making progress although still some
interference in vertically integrated companies - Institutions will be operational by summer 2005
in all countries - Non-household market should gradually be opened
according to country ability
17Priorities adopted as concerns legal reforms
aimed at making energy supply a fully commercial
service
- energy supply must be paid for
- enable denial of supply to those who do not pay
- make theft of energy a criminal offence
- enable speedy recovery of arrears
- ensure sustainability of operators
18The Key Importance of the Sequencing of Reforms
- Privatising the energy sector in transition
countries in advance of policy development and
proper regulation poses great risks to efficiency
gains, consumer welfare and the political
acceptance of reforms. - Proper sequencing involves
- Formulation of energy policies and rules for
implementing them, giving special attention to
energy efficiency and demand-side co-operation. - Establishing appropriate legislative and
regulatory framework - Preparing for privatisation through
commercialisation
19Current Situation
- Cooperation between countries as well as with
EU - sharing of informations, experiences, problems
etc. - learning
- Countries in the region are at different stages
- Advanced (Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, Croatia)
- Medium (Albania, FYROM, Serbia, UNMIK-Kosovo,
Bosnia Herzegovina, Montenegro) - Electricity reasonable progress, gas still at
beginning
20Investment Requirements
- Electricity
- Investment requirements estimated between 20
40 billion. - Significant reduction if a regional approach
prevails. - Generation Investment study (GIS) ongoing
- Needs to include Austria, Greece, Italy,
Slovenia and Turkey - Needs updated energy demand forecasts
- Has to lead to optimisation at regional level
- Gas
- Evaluation of all three possible route in
region (T-B-R-H, T-G- FYROM-S-C-S-A, T-G-I) - Dependent on energy demand forecasts
- Initial investment requirements in the range of
2 to 5 billion
21UCTE resynchronisation
- A crucial step for the creation of a Regional
Electricity Market is to allow better electricity
exchanges - Region is already interconnected but requires
replacements for missing HV transmission lines in
BiH - Funding was delayed due to lack of reform in BiH,
but is now going ahead with World Bank Power III
project - Resynchronisation is due in the second half of
2004 - Cross border trading mechanisms are already set
up - BiH will be able to export more electricity
- More income for BiH
22(No Transcript)
23- Grid Configuration for re-synchronization
- Three main connections (from the global UCTE
point of view) - Interconnections of regional interest
- Lines not completed
1.
2.
3.
23
24- Scenarios Analysis and Simulation Results
- Energy Exchanges Between Countries under Scenario
2 --- 2010 (GWh)
850
3756
970
78
1972
779
524
5068
2628
1752
25
336
2189
1356
2
8214
4361
731
880
2365
3293
1243
658
344
3363
1680
1737
546
25Opportunities for the Private Sector
- Extensive National Power Sector Reforms
Harmonisation are under way - Progressive Opening of National Markets
- Much larger and diversified Market will soon be
accessible - Opportunity for Building larger and more
efficient Generation Plants - Opportunity for Building Multinational Portfolios
of Generation Plants - Distribution Companies Open for Privatisation
26Recent Studies Initiatives
- EBRD Affordability Study
- SECI Transmission Planning Project
- Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau, Decon, Swedpower
Regional Study of Electricity Supply and Demand
in SEE - Southeast European Electrical System Technical
Support Project (SEETEC/CIDA) - EU CARDS programme
- World Bank Adaptable Programmatic Loans (APLs)
27Forthcoming Studies Initiatives
- Balkans Infrastructure Development Facility (BID
Facility) - Italian Regional Fund for infrastructure in SEE
(to be set up further Venice meeting of October
2003) - European Commission / World Bank Generation
Investment Study (GIS) - USAID social safety net
- Bilateral programmes and projects
28Next Steps
- 11-12 October SEECP Conference in Bucharest for
Parliamentarians, Social Partners and NGOs - 26-29 October Energy Week in Athens
- New negotiating session probably in November
- December Ministerial Conference
- ECSEE Treaty signing in late 2004/early 2005
29More Information from
- Athens Process Newsletterwww.seerecon.org/infrast
ructure/sectors/energy/newsletters.htm - Information data base in preparation sponsored by
Czech Rep. www.seenergy.org - Stability Pact for South Eastern Europe
www.stabilitypact.org/energy - European Commission and World Bank (Joint
Office/ISG) www.seerecon.org/infrastructure/secto
rs/energy - US Agency for International Development on
Regulationwww.seerem.org or www.erranet.org - Southeast European Electrical System Technical
Support Project (Canadian Int. Dev. Agency)
www.seetec-balkans.org - Peter Houzer, Expert Working Table II, Stability
Pact for SEE50, rue Wiertz 1050 Brussels,
BelgiumTel 32-2-401 87 17, Fax 32 2 401 8712,
peter.houzer_at_stabilitypact.org