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A more secure and stable energy system

Key achievements

Since 2022, we have

  • reduced gas consumption in the EU by 13%
  • overcome our dependency on Russian fossil fuels
  • produced more electricity from solar and wind than fossil fuels for the first time in 2025
  • ensured access to secure and affordable energy
  • rapidly increased renewable energy installation
  • 2% of oil imports

    down from 43%

  • 12% reliance on Russian gas in 2025

    down from 45% in 2021, with plans to phase it out entirely

  • Over 70%

    share of low-carbon electricity (renewables and nuclear)

Despite progress, sectors like transport remain heavily dependent on fossil fuels, and energy prices need further stabilisation. We must continue the work towards a more integrated energy union and further accelerate the transition to domestically produced low-carbon energy.

Winterproofing our gas supply

In summer 2022, the Commission proposed new rules to ensure Europe had sufficient gas supplies to withstand any sudden disruptions from Russia during the winter months.

With the new gas storage rules EU countries have to fill storage facilities to 90% by 1 November of each year. At the beginning of the 2024-2025 winter season the gas storages were 95% full, with the 90% threshold being reached already in August 2024.

Furthermore, EU countries agreed on a regulation to voluntary reduce natural gas demand by 15% for the 2022/2023 winter season, later extending it to cover the winter of 2023/2024. In March 2024, the Council adopted a recommendation to continue taking voluntary measures until March 2025 to maintain a collective 15% gas demand reduction, compared to the average demand between April 2017 and March 2022. 

In April 2022, the Commission also launched the EU Energy Platform, to help EU countries work together on global markets. The goal is to avoid competition between EU countries, use the EU’s influence to secure diverse energy sources, encourage competition among major suppliers and achieve better conditions for consumers.

Gas storage facilities to be filled before each winter
90% to be filled by 1 November of each year
95% share of the gas filling before the winter 2024-2025

Diversifying gas sources and investing in infrastructure

Investments in LNG terminals and gas interconnectors have ensured that every EU country can now receive gas from at least two sources, and reverse flows are possible between neighbours. For example, in May 2022, the Poland-Lithuania gas interconnector began operations, reinforcing the optionality and resilience of the Baltic gas market. Similarly, in October 2022, the Greece-Bulgaria gas interconnector was launched, playing a key role in diversifying gas supplies in South-East Europe.

Deploying renewable energy

Besides securing sources abroad, we have to use as much as possible homegrown energy. The EU is already a global leader in technology development for renewable energies.

In 2024, the share of renewables in the EU's energy consumption was 25.2%. With the revised Renewable Energy Directive in November 2023, EU countries agreed on an overall renewable energy target of at least 42.5% at EU level by 2030, with the aim to reach at least 45%.

Renewable energy in the EU
25.2% share of renewables in EU's energy consumption in 2024
42.5% overall renewable energy target at EU level by 2030 (with the aim to reach at least 45%)

Reducing bills for European households and businesses

  • introducing a temporary solidarity contribution on excess profits in the oil, gas, coal and refinery sectors, redirecting funds to energy consumers

The emergency measures expired in 2023.

In February 2023, EU countries also agreed on a Market Correction Mechanism to avoid disruptions to the energy and financial market. In case of need, it would have been automatically activated

  • if the month-ahead Title Transfer Facility (TTF) price exceeded €180/MWh for 3 working days, and

  • if the TTF price was €35 higher than a reference price for liquefied natural gas (LNG) on global markets for the same 3 working days

The mechanism was in force until January 2025 and never needed to be triggered, thanks to factors such as structural demand decline, reliable LNG and pipeline imports from trusted partners, and enhanced import infrastructure.

Affordable energy action plan

Nevertheless, energy prices in the EU remain structurally high, which hurt EU citizens and the competitiveness of the EU industry. The Commission therefore proposed in February 2025 the affordable energy action plan, which sets out concrete short-term measures to lower energy costs for citizens, businesses, industry and communities across the EU, complete the energy union, attract investments, and be better prepared for potential energy crises. 

This will allow for overall estimated savings of €45 billion in 2025, with a progressive increase of up to €130 billion annually by 2030, and €260 billion annually by 2040.

€45 billion in 2025
up to €130 billion annually by 2030
up to €260 billion annually by 2040

The Commission has also presented the following measures to ensure energy affordability:

  • the citizens energy package, offering lower taxes, faster supplier switching, and transparent billing

  • the clean energy investment strategy, boosting investment in clean technologies

  • €200 million in private investment guarantees to support the deployment of advanced nuclear technologies, including small modular reactors

The shift to clean energy transition is about creating a resilient, affordable, and independent energy system that benefits everyone. This also means reducing reliance and fossils fuels.

This page was last updated on 22 April 2026