Empow­ering Ukraine – Small distributed gener­ation and reforming the energy system

Foto: Imago Images

In response to the Russian invasion and the attacks on the energy infra­structure, Ukraine’s government has priori­tised energy decen­tral­i­sation as one of the direc­tions for improving energy security and resilience. The author of the brief, Oleksii Romanov, covers the current state of the industry and the stimu­lation system, analyses the plans for reforming this system, drafts the principles to guide future policy and the potential areas of German-Ukrainian cooper­ation for the decen­tral­i­sation of Ukraine’s energy system.

Executive Summary

Small-scale distributed gener­ation began to develop rapidly in Ukraine in the mid-2010s, driven by the government’s incentive system, which is based on green tariffs. Solar photo­voltaic (PV) power plants have come to dominate this sector. This has increased the security of the local electricity supply but has also resulted in an imbalance between production and consumption.

To address these issues, Ukraine is planning a compre­hensive reform of its incentive system. The reform will introduce “net billing” and promote the use of hybrid power plants that have energy storage systems. This reform aims at a more balanced and sustainable devel­opment of distributed gener­ation as part of Ukraine’s green transition. Measures which might further incen­tivise the devel­opment of small distributed gener­ation include the following:

  • Providing support for house­holds and critical infra­structure facil­ities to cover the cost of acquiring stand­alone or combined renewable and storage technologies;
  • Liber­al­ising the electricity market, including by easing the price caps in the wholesale electricity market;
  • Abolishing subsidised electricity tariffs for house­holds in the retail electricity market.

These measures could create effective economic stimuli for increases in energy efficiency and gener­ation for self-consumption as well as for new business cases such as price arbitrage and stimuli for the aggre­gation of distributed energy resources of active consumers.

However, it is important to note that small-scale distributed gener­ation is associated with potential drawbacks as well as benefits for the energy system, consumers, and society. This makes a carefully balanced and proactive policy approach essential.

Overall, distributed gener­ation can contribute to Ukraine’s economic devel­opment and green energy transition. Germany is a European leader in this area, and Ukraine could benefit from policy, techno­logical, investment, financial, and educa­tional cooper­ation with Germany.

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