“He saw the cities of many people and he learnt their ways.“ tells poet Homer about Ulysses and his long journey. This sounds familiar to the LIFE LOOP team: on the footsteps of the Greek hero, project partners met in October on the island of Crete to share energy community practices of many cities and learn from the many people involved.
Hosted by Minoan Energy, a pioneering community on the island, pilots and expert partners came together to update and forecast city-citizen actions on renewable energy and retrofit.
Representatives from some of the pilot sites namely in Greece, Romania, Croatia, Cyprus, and Italy gathered to discuss their achievements, the challenges they face, and their strategic roadmaps aimed at fostering local energy ownership.
The meeting highlighted each area’s strides toward LIFE LOOP’s ambitious goals of setting up energy communities that involve municipalities and citizens to promote renewable energy, reduce carbon emissions and increase resilience at the local level. The primary focus was on collaboration, exchanging best practices, and action plans for implementing the planned community energy solutions before the project end in September 2025.
Here is a summary of key updates from some of the LIFELOOP pilots:
🇬🇷 Minoan Pilot (Crete, Greece):
🇷🇴 Bistrita Municipality (Romania):
🇭🇷 City of Zagreb (Croatia):
🇨🇾 Cyprus:
🇮🇹 Vilanovaforu and Usaramanna in Sardinia (Italy):
This meeting was the valuable opportunity to discuss the energy communities concept with people coming from different geographical, social and cultural contexts – to be “forced” to find answers to questions you never thought about, to learn to see things from different angles.
Sara Gollesi, Enostra
“There is a land called Crete, in the midst of the wine-dark sea, a fair, rich land, begirt with water, and therein are many men, past counting, and ninety cities.” writes Homer. And, indeed, meeting on this Greek island was very meaningful as it bursts with committed inhabitants and leaders who are eager to spread community energy. The study visit to the Arkocholori solar power plant was a hands-on experience of this. At a leisure visit to the archaelogocial site of Knossos the team learnt that the Minoans were the most advanced European civilization and had running water and sewage systems. 3500 years later, Minoan Energy is a similarly pioneering community: they want to transform the energy system in Crete and are now the largest community in Greece (with 1300 members)!
Overall, the LIFE LOOP meeting underscored the collective determination to make community-led renewable energy a reality. With OSS facilities, educational campaigns, and innovative financing models taking center stage, project partners left Crete with a renewed enthusiasm to bring local authorities and local stakeholders together for lasting renewable partnerships – in Crete and anywhere else.