On 15 July, the European Commission is expected to publish a proposal to amend the Electricity Market Design Directive. The proposal aims to improve how Europe’s electricity system is organised, with a focus on making better use of existing grid infrastructure while encouraging more system-friendly consumption patterns.
The proposal will:
Overall, Energy Cities welcomes the direction of the proposal, which supports a more resilient and affordable energy system based on decentralisation and decarbonisation, where local stakeholders—including energy communities, local authorities, citizens, and SMEs—play an active role.
In our recent report with data and examples, we’ve shown that non-fossil flexibility is essential for resilience, energy security, and affordability, offering a strong alternative to grid expansion and enabling greater involvement of local actors.
These include stronger demand-side flexibility at the local level, fairer network charges for storage systems — which play a key role in addressing grid congestion —a nd improved tariff structures that could benefit energy communities and vulnerable households.
In practical terms, this could translate into faster electrification and greater integration of renewables in urban areas, alongside more equitable electricity pricing for households, local businesses, and local authorities.
However, we find that the proposal could be strengthened further through additional clarifications and targeted amendments to ensure the proposal fully delivers on its ambition of a fair, flexible, and future-proof electricity system.
These include: