EU beats 2020 sustainable energy target, with Latvia, Austria, Croatia CEE’s greenest

Reading Time: 2 minutes

As the EU surpassed its target of 20% sustainable energy usage in 2020, the Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) high achiever was Latvia 42.1%, which was in 3rd place in the bloc as a whole, new Eurostat figures show.

In total, 7 CEE countries were above the EU average of 21.1%: Austria with 36.5% green energy consumption, followed by Croatia (31%) Estonia (30.2%) Lithuania (26.8%) Slovenia (25%) Romania (24.5%) and Bulgaria (23.3%). The Visegrad Four states were the region’s laggards, with Slovakia and Czechia only using 17.3% renewable energy in 2020, above Poland on 16.1%. Hungary was CEE’s worst performer on green energy, as it made up only 13.9% of its energy mix in 2020, according to the EU’s official statistics agency.

In 2020, renewable energy sources made up 37% of gross electricity consumption in the EU, up from 34% in 2019, Eurostat notes. Of these, wind (36%) and hydropower (33%) accounted for over two-thirds of electricity from renewable sources. The remaining third came from solar power (14%), solid biofuels (8%) and other renewable sources (8%). Solar power is the fastest-growing source: in 2008, it only accounted for 1% of the electricity consumed in the EU, while that figure had spiked to 14% in 2020, the statistics agency underlines.

With 78.2% of its electricity generated from renewable sources, Austria had the greenest electricity mix in the bloc in 2020. Croatia and Latvia were once again outstanding in the CEE group, as they generated more than half (53%) of their electricity from renewable sources. Hungary was CEE’s worst performer in this category too, on around 12%.

“Becoming the world’s first climate-neutral continent by 2050 is the objective behind the European Green Deal, the very ambitious package of measures that should enable European citizens and businesses to benefit from sustainable green transition,” the EU’s official statistics agency writes.

CET Editor

Recent Posts

Gender pay gaps remain in CEE, despite EU efforts

Romania and Poland have gender pay disparities among the lowest in the EU, according to…

6 days ago

Europe’s trilemma: rearmament, green transition, competitiveness

European leaders met in Brussels on 20 March to confront a mounting policy dilemma: how…

6 days ago

‘We always choose the best and fastest method for acquiring ammunition’ – Estonia defends policy

Estonian Defence Minister Hanno Pevkur pushed back on Tuesday against criticism of the country’s joint…

6 days ago

Croatia eyes Russia’s share in Serbian oil firm NIS

Croatian Economy Minister Ante Susnjar said state-owned oil pipeline operator Jadranski Naftovod (Janaf) could acquire…

6 days ago

EU probes Hungarian subsidies to BYD under new foreign subsidies rules

The European Commission (EC) has launched an inquiry into state support provided by Hungary to…

7 days ago

Poland’s GDP to grow by 3.7%, CEE by 2.6%

Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) is set for stronger economic growth in 2025, with GDP…

2 weeks ago