2025
2025
Today, ACER publishes a position paper introducing output performance indicators to measure the performance of grid-enhancing technologies in electricity transmission.
Europe’s energy transition is driving rapid growth in electricity demand and renewable generation, putting increasing pressure on transmission networks. While grid expansion remains key, making better use of existing infrastructure through innovative operational practices, digitalisation and grid-enhancing technologies is equally important, as smart solutions of transmission system operators (TSOs) can often deliver additional capacity faster and at a lower cost.
EU legislation already requires national regulators to monitor the development of smart electricity grids. To ensure smart grid solutions deliver benefits, regulators need ways to assess their real-world performance.
The June 2025 Copenhagen Infrastructure Forum invited ACER, together with the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) and other stakeholders, to develop a common approach for assessing the performance of smart-grid solutions at transmission level.
In parallel, the Council of European Energy Regulators (CEER) publishes today its report on indicators to measure performance at distribution level.
Transmission smart grid infrastructure can be assessed using two types of indicators:
ACER found that few EU countries currently systematically measure how grid-enhancing technologies perform in practice, making it difficult to assess their effectiveness. This ACER paper addresses this gap. It builds a foundation for more consistent and comparable assessments of TSO performance across Europe.
ACER proposes three output indicators for regulators to assess whether grid-enhancing technologies in transmission grids deliver improvements and cost benefits:
These performance indicators address grid capacity gains, operational-security cost reductions and cost-efficient alternatives to conventional grid expansion. By capturing their actual performance, these output indicators help ensure that innovative approaches truly unlock grid capacity and reduce system costs.
Beyond the three proposed output indicators, the paper also highlights complementary areas of monitoring that can enhance regulatory insight.
Implementation should follow a phased, learning-oriented approach, starting with national testing of the indicators. A two- to three-year transition period will allow regulators to adjust them where needed as they are further developed and implemented.
Over time, the accumulated data and shared experience can support more systematic assessment of grid performance and innovation across Europe.
ACER has released its multi-annual programming document 2026-2028, outlining its strategic goals and priorities for the coming years, including its 2026 work programme.
ACER will continue its work on:
In 2026, ACER’s work will focus on the following priorities:
The document was adopted on 12 December 2025 by ACER's Administrative Board, following the favourable opinion of the Agency's Board of Regulators.
ACER published its report on the implementation of the inter-transmission system operators compensation mechanism (ITC) for 2024.
ACER issues these yearly monitoring reports since 2012, as mandated by the Commission’s Regulation.
The inter-transmission system operators compensation (ITC) mechanism, managed by the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E), compensates transmission system operators (TSOs) for the costs of hosting cross-border flows on their networks (including costs from power losses and infrastructure investments).
The mechanism works through the ITC fund: participating TSOs both contribute and receive money from it, depending on how much electricity they import, export and transmit across their national borders. The aim of the mechanism is to ensure that costs and benefits are fairly shared among the TSOs.
The ITC mechanism currently includes 36 TSOs from across the EU and neighbouring countries, including the Ukrainian TSO Ukrenergo, who officially joined the ITC agreement in July 2024.
ACER is currently reviewing existing EU mechanisms for sharing the costs and benefits of electricity network infrastructure arising from cross-border trade, including the ITC mechanism. The aim is to better reflect the EU-wide benefits of the grid and to facilitate infrastructure investments that extend beyond national interests and needs. The findings of this exercise will feed into an ACER policy paper in 2026.
In 2024, the revision of REMIT (Regulation on Wholesale Energy Market Integrity and Transparency) introduced new data reporting requirements, including the obligation to report exposure data, which shows how much market participants are exposed to price movements in wholesale energy markets.
At the same time, broader initiatives such as the Clean Industrial Deal and the EC consultation on the functioning of commodity derivatives and spot energy markets highlight the importance of simplifying and standardising data reporting.
As exposure data is a new and distinct reporting stream under REMIT, ACER will implement a new electronic template ‘Exposure XSD’ for its reporting, as set out in the revised REMIT and the recast REMIT Implementing Regulation.
Within this context, ACER is exploring whether the ‘ISO 20022 standard’, a common framework for exchanging data, could be applied to the ‘Exposure XSD’ reporting format, with the aim of making the reporting process simpler and more interoperable.
As a new reporting stream, the Exposure XSD is a suitable candidate that may benefit from the use of an existing standard. It is the only reporting format covered by this consultation, and no changes to existing REMIT reporting formats are being considered.
To support more harmonised reporting and to improve the interoperability of reported data, ACER will run a public consultation to gather input. Stakeholders are invited to share their views on the potential benefits of applying the ISO 20022 standard to the Exposure XSD reporting format.
The public consultation will run from 12 January until 9 February 2026.
Based on the input received, ACER will assess whether to proceed with adopting the ISO 20022 standard for the Exposure XSD electronic format.
Technical specifications and detailed guidance on how to report exposure data in line with REMIT Implementing Regulation will be addressed in a separate consultation, to be launched after the revised Regulation enters into force.
On 17 December 2025, the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) submitted its proposal for the European Resource Adequacy Assessment (ERAA) 2025 to ACER.
Mandated by the 2019 Clean Energy Package, the ERAA is ENTSO-E’s annual evaluation of the risks to the EU’s security of electricity supply for up to 10 years ahead. Following the methodology approved by ACER in 2020, ENTSO-E must carry out an annual assessment on whether the EU has sufficient electricity resources to meet future demand.
At national level, Member States set their own electricity reliability standards to indicate the level of security of electricity supply they need. At European level, the ERAA verifies whether the EU’s electricity system can meet these national standards.
The ERAA provides an objective basis for identifying potential risks to Europe’s security of electricity supply and for determining whether additional national measures, such as capacity mechanisms, are needed. It helps inform decisions by Member States and the European Commission (e.g. state aid decisions) on national security of electricity supply measures.
Every year, where necessary, ACER suggests how to improve the next ERAA before ENTSO-E begins its work (e.g. see ACER suggestions for the ERAA 2025). ACER also actively engages with ENTSO-E throughout the year.
ACER will review and decide on ENTSO-E’s proposed ERAA 2025 within three months of its submission.
On 2 July 2025, ACER received a proposal from the EU transmission system operators (TSOs) to amend the methodology for intraday cross-zonal gate opening and closure time.
Established under the Capacity Allocation and Congestion Management (CACM) Regulation, the methodology sets harmonised rules across EU Member States for when electricity trading can begin (gate opening time) and end (gate closure time) in the intraday market. The intraday market is a short-term market where electricity is bought and sold on the same day as delivery after the day-ahead market has closed.
The TSOs proposed shortening the gate closure time from the current 60 to 30 minutes before delivery, while keeping the gate opening time unchanged.
Shortening the gate closure time is expected to:
This amendment aims to align the methodology with the requirements of the Electricity Market Design Reform (2024), which seeks to improve the efficiency of short-term markets.
On 19 December 2025, ACER approved the TSOs proposal, adding several clarifications and adjustments, including:
From 1 January 2026, the first TSOs will start implementing the 30-minutes gate closure time, with full rollout subject to national regulatory decisions.
On 18 December 2025, ACER received two proposals from the European electricity transmission system operators (TSOs) to amend the implementation frameworks for two European platforms for exchanging balancing energy.
These frameworks describe the design of the Platform for the International Coordination of Automated Frequency Restoration and Stable System Operation (PICASSO) and Manually Activated Reserves Initiative (MARI). These European platforms help integrate European balancing energy markets by using a common merit order list to enable cost-efficient activation of balancing energy bids across Europe.
The TSOs’ proposals amend how balancing service providers (BSPs) participate in the European balancing markets. These markets operate in near real time, with BSPs offering services that TSOs purchase to correct imbalances (e.g. by increasing electricity generation or reducing consumption) and keep the electricity system secure.
The main focus of the TSOs’ proposals is the harmonisation of the BSPs prequalification process, which ensures that power generation or demand units meet the technical and operational requirements to provide balancing services. The proposals also harmonise the procedure for amending the implementation frameworks for the balancing platforms across Europe.
As cross-border exchanges of balancing products grow, ensuring a level playing field for BSPs becomes increasingly important. Harmonising prequalification rules across Member States is key to ensuring fair, transparent and efficient access to European balancing markets.
ACER will review the TSOs’ proposals to ensure they align with the Electricity Balancing Regulation and the Regulation on the Internal Market for Electricity.
To inform its decision, ACER will run a public consultation from 26 January 2026 to 23 February 2026.
ACER will decide whether to amend the implementation frameworks by 18 June 2026.
Today, ACER releases its report on the Polish gas transmission tariffs directed at GAZ-SYSTEM S.A., Poland’s transmission system operator (TSO), which manages the country’s two transmission systems.
The report assesses the compliance of the proposed reference price methodology (RPM) with the requirements of the EU Network Code on Harmonised Transmission Tariff structures.
The Polish TSO proposes to:
After analysing the consultation document, ACER concludes that:
ACER recommends that the Polish national regulator (URE), when adopting its final decision on the proposed methodology:
See all ACER reports on national tariff consultation documents.