Subsidies tarif details

Netherlands:

€ 0,46 per kWh. The Dutch Cabinet has agreed to implement a feed-in tariff on 27 March 2009, during a renegotiation of the government agenda in response to the global financial crisis .[37]. The proposed regulation replaces a quota incentive system.

Belgium:

€ 0,45 per kWh

England:

The UK Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change announced in October 2008 that the UK would implement a feed-in tariff by April 2010 in addition to its current renewable energy quota scheme (see ROCS).

France:

€ 0,60 per kWh

Germany:

For energy produced from power generation facilities utilizing solar radiation (ie, solar thermal or solar photovoltaic installations) that were commissioned prior to 2005, the feed-in tariff must amount to at least 45.7 cents per kWh. If the installation is attached to or integrated on top of a building or noise barrier, the compensation rates are as follows:

  • Capacity of 30 kW or below: 57.4 cents per kWh
  • Capacity 30 kW to 100 kW: 54.6 cents per kWh
  • Capacity above 100 kW: 54.0 cents per kWh

Facade installations – that is, solar installations which are neither on a building's roof nor are part of the roof, but which make up a substantial portion of the building – receive an additional 5 cents per kWh of electricity generated, as they have a lesser energy output than true roof installations. To increase public awareness of renewable energies, even higher feed-in tariff rates are provided for visible facade installations which are in the field of vision of observers.

Austria:

Feed in tariff (max 15 MWp , systems installed in 2003 04 ) from 0.47 €/kWh (< 20 kWp ) to 0.6 €/kWh (> 20 kWp Feed-MWp, 2003-kWp)

Spain:

I) Building Integrated installations; with 34c€/kWh in systems up to 20kW of nominal power, and for systems above 20kW with a limit of nominal power of 2MW tariff of 31c€/kWh .
II) Non integrated installations; 32c€/kWh for systems up to 10MW of nominal power.

Italy:

 

Greece:

Renewable Energy Sources legislation which provides grants, favorable tax treatment, and a €0.40-0.50 feed-in tariff as incentives for setting up business or installing solar-PV systems. For commercial entities, incentives in the form of grants can run as high as 50 percent of the total cost of a company’s solar system. The government's goal is to install 700 megawatts of PV in the country by 2020.

Turkey:

Turkish PV market has referred to the country’s government’s recent introduction of a €0.28 feed-in tariff for the first 10 years, with a rate of €0.22 thereafter for another 10-year period. Turkey receives an average of seven hours of sunshine per day, with a radiation intensity of 1,300 kilowatt-hours per square metre.

There are variations for several subsidized possibilities per country. Please send a mail for subsidies in your country.