ACER's Latest News - 24 June 2026

ACER updates methodology for a more efficient assessment of regional electricity reserve requirements

In March 2026, ACER received a proposal from the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) to amend the methodology for the regional sizing of reserve capacity. After reviewing the proposal and exchanging with stakeholders, ACER has decided to amend the methodology.

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ACER updates methodology for a more efficient assessment of regional electricity reserve requirements

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Electricity transmission tower in flower field
Intro News
After reviewing ENTSO-E's proposal and exchanging with stakeholders, ACER has decided to amend the methodology for the regional sizing of reserve capacity.

ACER updates methodology for a more efficient assessment of regional electricity reserve requirements

What is it about?

In March 2026, ACER received a proposal from the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) to amend the methodology for the regional sizing of reserve capacity. After reviewing the proposal and exchanging with stakeholders, ACER has decided to amend the methodology.

What is the methodology about?

The methodology for the regional sizing of reserve capacity (first approved by ACER in 2023) allows regional coordination centres (RCCs) to assess the reserves needed at regional level, taking into account volumes shared between transmission system operators (TSOs) through bilateral agreements. 

This coordination helps reduce procurement costs and ensure a more efficient distribution of reserves across Europe. Based on their assessment, RCCs provide TSOs with recommendations on how to optimise reserve capacity volumes, leveraging the flexibility of the EU electricity system.

What’s new in the amended methodology?

As previously requested by ACER, the methodology now:

  • Establishes that all RCCs must rely on data from the previous 12 months when assessing the minimum volume of reserves needed for the following year. This ensures the data used reflects the most relevant and frequent system conditions.
  • Specifies, for each system operation region, how much reserve capacity is needed to cover positive and negative imbalances. 
  • Introduces a 24-month rolling implementation deadline for assessing the short-term availability of reserve capacity (for sharing agreements established after 1 July 2026).
  • Enhances transparency by strengthening and streamlining RCCs’ reporting obligations.

These changes will help RCCs size reserve capacity more efficiently, address TSOs’ operational risks and enhance the process’ transparency and coordination.

What are the next steps? 

As previously agreed, RCCs must implement the methodology’s main changes by 1 July 2026.

ACER's Latest News - 24 June 2026

EU needs more than one solution to decarbonise its gas market

As the EU moves towards a decarbonised energy system, the role of gas is evolving. Reducing fossil gas dependence can support the EU’s 2050 climate neutrality target, while also raising important questions around security of supply, affordability and competitiveness.

ACER’s 2026 Monitoring Report on decarbonising the EU's gas market examines four key dilemmas:

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EU needs more than one solution to decarbonise its gas market

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Green gas
Intro News
This ACER Monitoring Report examines the key challenges, trade-offs and policy dilemmas linked to decarbonising the EU natural gas market.

EU needs more than one solution to decarbonise its gas market

What is it about?

As the EU moves towards a decarbonised energy system, the role of gas is evolving. Reducing fossil gas dependence can support the EU’s 2050 climate neutrality target, while also raising important questions around security of supply, affordability and competitiveness.

ACER’s 2026 Monitoring Report on decarbonising the EU's gas market, published today, examines four key dilemmas:

  1. Can renewable gases reduce gas import dependency while keeping energy prices affordable?
  2. Will natural gas continue to shape electricity prices during the energy transition?
  3. Can the EU decarbonise its gas sector without undermining industrial competitiveness?
  4. How can methane emissions be tackled, given the potential for low-cost abatement but rising implementation risks?​

What did ACER monitoring find? 

ACER’s monitoring shows that gas decarbonisation can follow two main strategies: Displacing natural gas, by reducing demand or switching to renewables, and reducing its greenhouse gas footprint, for example through carbon capture, storage and measures to address methane leaks.

  • Gas demand reductions are not guaranteed. EU gas demand reached 340 bcm in 2025, up 2% from 2024, which could slow progress towards the EU’s decarbonisation goals. Gas continues to provide system flexibility and remains important for industrial competitiveness.
  • Gas still affects electricity prices and industry. Gas-fired power plants were economically competitive in 40% of hours in 2025, while low-carbon electricity systems paid on average 40% less than more carbon-intensive peers.
  • Biomethane is promising but still limited. Biomethane is the most mature renewable gas option, but with 4.3 bcm of output in 2024, it represents only 2% of gas network injections.
  • Methane emissions remain a supply-chain challenge. 85% of methane emissions linked to EU gas and oil consumption occur outside the EU, making implementation of the EU Methane Regulation key but challenging.

Together, these findings show that no single solution can decarbonise the gas sector. A balanced portfolio of technologies and policy measures will be needed, including electrification, biomethane, hydrogen, carbon capture and storage, methane emissions reduction and clean flexibility solutions.

Webinar

ACER will hold a webinar to present the main findings of this report. 

When? 24 September 2026 at 10:00 CET. 

Register for free.

ACER webinar: Decarbonisation of the EU’s natural gas market

ACER webinar: Decarbonisation of the EU’s natural gas market

Online
24/09/2026 10:00 - 11:00 (Europe/Ljubljana)

ACER webinar on gas decarbonisation

ACER's Latest News - 19 June 2026

ACER will consult on details of how to report energy derivative transactions under REMIT

On Thursday 16 July 2026, ACER will open a public consultation on an Annex to the Guideline on REMIT transaction reporting, covering energy derivative transactions.

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ACER will consult on details of how to report energy derivative transactions under REMIT

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Energy trading data
Intro News
On Thursday 16 July 2026, ACER will open a public consultation on an Annex to the Guideline on REMIT transaction reporting, covering energy derivative transactions.

ACER will consult on details of how to report energy derivative transactions under REMIT

What is it about?

On Thursday 16 July 2026, ACER will open a public consultation on an Annex to the Guideline on REMIT transaction reporting, covering energy derivative transactions.

What is it about?

REMIT is the EU-wide framework that detects and deters market manipulation and abuse in wholesale energy markets. The Regulation was revised in 2024 to keep pace with evolving market dynamics, and its secondary legislation was updated in April 2026 with new and revised obligations.

To reflect these regulatory developments, ACER is updating its guidance, including a new Guideline on REMIT transaction reporting (see ACER’s consultation).

Why are we consulting?

To complement the new Guideline, ACER has developed a dedicated Annex on the reporting of energy derivative transactions. The Annex:

  • Clarifies the scope of reporting under REMIT and Regulation (EU) 648/2012 on over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives, central counterparties and trade repositories (‘EMIR’).
  • Explains how REMIT reporting exemptions apply for derivatives that are already reported under EMIR.

ACER is seeking stakeholder input to ensure the Annex is clear, practical and supports consistent data reporting across the EU.

Have your say!

The public consultation will run from 16 July to 11 September 2026.

ACER is hoping to hear from any interested parties, including but not limited to market participants, national regulatory authorities, registered reporting mechanisms (RRMs) and organised marketplaces (OMPs).

In this process, ACER will also cooperate and consult with the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA).

Read more and get ready to share your views.

Decarbonisation of the EU’s natural gas market

  • Gas
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Decarbonised gas

2026 Monitoring Report

As the EU moves towards a decarbonised energy system, the role of gas is evolving. The clean energy transition aims to reduce fossil gas dependence while supporting security of supply, affordability and competitiveness. Decarbonising the natural gas market remains a key opportunity to support the EU’s 2050 climate neutrality target, as the gas sector accounts for around 20% of EU greenhouse gas emissions.

This ACER report examines the key challenges, trade-offs and policy dilemmas linked to decarbonising the EU natural gas market. The report is structured around four dilemmas: 

Dilemma 1. Can renewable gases (such as biomethane or low-carbon hydrogen) reconcile the EU’s objective of reducing gas import dependency with the need to maintain energy prices affordable?

Dilemma 2. Will the rising cost of natural gas contribute to persistently high electricity prices during the energy transition?

Dilemma 3. Can the EU decarbonise its gas sector without further affecting industrial competitiveness?

Dilemma 4. How can methane emissions be tackled, given the potential for low-cost abatement but rising implementation risks?​

The report explores how the EU can balance gas decarbonisation with the three pillars of EU energy policy, namely sustainability, security of supply and industrial competitiveness and affordability.

What did ACER monitoring find? 

  • There are two strategies to decarbonise the gas market: Displacing natural gas and/or reducing its carbon footprint. The former means reducing gas demand and/or switching from gas to renewables. Reducing carbon footprint means using carbon capture and storage and/or addressing methane leaks, as methane is a potent greenhouse gas.

  • Sustained gas demand reductions are not guaranteed. EU gas demand reached 340 bcm in 2025, up 2% from 2024, which could slow progress towards the EU’s decarbonisation goals. Despite ambitious demand-reduction targets under REPowerEU plan, progress has somewhat stalled: gas still provides system-flexibility, renewable generation remains weather-dependent and reducing industrial gas demand could affect competitiveness. As a result, gas decarbonisation will likely rely not only on electrification, but also on a mix of mature and emerging technologies, including biomethane, hydrogen, carbon capture and storage.

  • Gas still shapes electricity prices. Fossil gas continues to provide important flexibility to the electricity system. In 2025, gas-fired power plants were economically competitive in 40% of hours. Member States with low-carbon electricity mixes paid on average 40% less than more carbon-intensive peers, underlining the affordability benefits of power-sector decarbonisation.

  • Natural gas accounts for one third of EU industrial final energy consumption. Decarbonisation options differ widely by industrial sector, while carbon pricing and global competition shape the pace and feasibility of the EU’s industrial transition.

  • 85% of methane emissions linked to EU gas and oil consumption occur outside the EU. This makes the EU Methane Regulation key to reducing emissions across the gas supply chain. However, implementation remains challenging due to regulatory uncertainty, producer and supplier hesitancy, and delays in national penalty frameworks.

  • Biomethane remains promising but limited. Biomethane is currently the most mature renewable gas option, but with 4.3 bcm of output in 2024, it represents only 2% of gas network injections. Expanding domestic renewable production could strengthen the EU’s security of supply, but its competitiveness depends on carbon prices and the value of sustainability certificates (which allow consumers to claim its sustainability value).

  • A balanced portfolio to decarbonise the gas sector is needed. No single solution can decarbonise the gas sector. Delaying action may ultimately cost more than deploying new technologies and transition pathways.

What policy considerations does ACER suggest?

ACER outlines policy considerations for EU and national policymakers, national regulators and market participants:

  • Unlock domestic biomethane’s potential by addressing feedstock mobilisation, cross-border trading barriers and regulatory fragmentation.
  • Support the development of a harmonised EU biomethane market through consistent rules on guarantees of origin and proof-of-sustainability certification.
  • Ensure that carbon pricing supports both decarbonisation and industrial competitiveness through stable, predictable and credible signals from the EU emissions trading system (ETS) and the carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM).
  • Accelerate the deployment of low-carbon gas supply options (such as biomethane) and clean flexibility solutions (such as batteries and demand response) to reduce the role of fossil gas in electricity price formation.
  • Reduce regulatory and contractual uncertainty around methane rules by providing early clarity on compliance methodologies and acceptable approaches. 
  • Strengthen the dialogue and cooperation between policymakers, suppliers and industrial consumers.
  • Enhance coordinated infrastructure planning and regulatory alignment across the gas, electricity and hydrogen sectors throughout the energy transition to enable efficient system integration.

Highlights

  • 85%

    of methane emissions linked to EU gas and oil consumption occur outside the EU.

  • -40%

    average day-ahead electricity prices in low-carbon electricity systems vs. carbon-intensive ones, showing cost benefits of decarbonisation.

  • 5%

    annual growth in EU biomethane production.

Report

ACER’s 2026 Monitoring Report on decarbonising the EU gas market:

  • analyses the key challenges and trade-offs linked to decarbonising the EU gas market;
  • assesses the role of biomethane and methane-emissions reduction; 
  • examines gas-electricity interactions during the energy transition;
  • looks at the decarbonisation of industry; and
  • shows why a balanced portfolio of technologies and policy measures is needed to support the EU’s energy transition.

  Access the report

Infographic

This infographic explores why decarbonising the EU gas market requires a balanced mix of solutions, from reducing fossil gas demand to cutting the carbon footprint of remaining gas use.

  Dive into our infographic

Webinar

ACER will hold a webinar to present the main findings of this report.

When?

24 September 2026 at 10:00 CET.

  Register now

Additional information

No