The march of the European prosumer
Areti Ntaradimou
Posted on: 8 September 2021
Areti Ntaradimou ponders the role of energy communities in the fulfilment of Europe's Clean Energy Package.

Areti Ntaradimou ponders the role of energy communities in the fulfilment of Europe's Clean Energy Package.
Historically, Europe has always been an anthropocentric continent, placing the individual and the community
in the centre of its philosophical, sociological and economic ideas. Therefore, it should not come as a surprise to anyone that the European Commission does exactly the same on every level, including the one that interests us the most. That of the Energy Sector.
Since 2019 and as the European answer to the Paris Agreement, the Clean Energy Package brought to the table an enabling legislative framework for citizen and energy communities. Since then, community energy projects, mostly on renewable energy sources, have increased in number and have provided incentives and increased awareness.
Projects like 'Clean Energy for EU Islands' that helps island communities transit to clean energy sources - or 'FlexCoop' - a complete demand response solution targeting energy cooperatives and their residential consumer-members - are sponsored by the EU Commission. And they engage citizens, reinforce social norms and support the energy transition.
As Achille Hannoset, DG Energy, says: "The purpose of energy communities is to provide value over profit. And this is very important to emphasize, as it is very much a social concept. In addition, they have a democratic participation structure because their work is based on the principle of openness, and voluntariness."
The social innovation potential of energy communities also resides in the ability to allow access to consumers independently of their income or access to capital, and therefore ensure democratic participation in projects that are transforming the energy system.
Moreover, the European Commission's Clean Energy for All Europeans Package confirms the prominent role prosumers and their collective forms will play in the future energy system. The EU legislative framework formally acknowledges and defines specific types of community energy as 'renewable energy communities' and 'citizen energy communities'.
But how does the Clean Package envision the Energy Communities? According to Hannoset, "as a means to empower citizens in the energy transition, but also to accelerate the transition itself and increase the uptake of renewables.
And finally, as a way to also trigger energy-conscious behaviour, where people have control over their production and supply, and they take up more and more responsibility in the energy sector, so they don't merely act out of economic self-interest anymore, but are also taking social responsibilities."
A 'social contract' of this kind, establishing an energy community very much like the political community Rousseau envisioned in 1762, would need a robust regulatory framework in order to bloom and flourish. Not to mention to help deploy the renewable capacity at the scale necessary to reach our 2030 and 2050 targets.








