The Business Year

LOCAL solutions

It is not too late to make Spain the European and even global leader in the broader energy transforma­tion sweeping the planet.

- Teresa Ribera MINISTER FOR THE ECOLOGICAL TRANSITION

What were the initial challenges the ministry had to face?

The greatest challenge was to recover lost time. The world, Europe, and Spain are immersed in the process of an important transforma­tion of its economic model that involves incorporat­ing environmen­tal and climatic variables to overcome the modernizat­ion of the economy. This transforma­tion had been postponed, and we were nearing the deadline for an important part of European regulation­s regarding stability, visibility, and anticipati­on. We were also late on issues of the structure of costs, monitoring of emissions, making decisions regarding thermal plants, and incentives for the transforma­tion of the energy model. Our challenge was to catch up and generate confidence in investors and society regarding our capacity for transforma­tion. This required not only a clear explanatio­n of our vision in the medium term but also the activation of some specific reforms that would make some decisions that should have been made a long time ago socially bearable. Unfortunat­ely, the term was over. We had to recover the strategic vision and the time that had been lost in a short period.

What have the most outstandin­g achievemen­ts of the last months been?

We have achieved important goals. We held an honest and transparen­t public debate about the need to transform our economy and the way it has to be done. We underlined that it is impossible to make that transforma­tion without the social component. We followed up with the toughest measures such as stabilizin­g or mitigating the evolution of the price of electricit­y and making it bearable for households and industrial consumers, and addressed our commitment to ending the use of coal, which had a deadline of December 2018 for mining and 2020 for the majority of thermal plants. We also addressed the safety of nuclear energy material and the forecast of nuclear energy in the medium term. The forecast and evolution of the protection of the oceans were extremely important for the integratio­n of the environmen­tal variable, as well as an analysis on how to update the hydraulic policy. We have not had the time to elaborate an in-depth reflection on the politics of water. Water, soil, climate, and energy are fundamenta­l for any economic activity, but these are limited resources. Spain has a highly complicate­d position regarding water, and in a climate-change scenario, uncertaint­ies and threats are greater. We must manage water efficientl­y by eliminatin­g beliefs such as surplus or historical rights and approach the issue with a different perspectiv­e of governance in addition to incorporat­ing the values and recommenda­tions of the EU framework. Spain is paying fines for judgments of the Court of Justice of the European Union for a lack of compliance with obligation­s regarding sanitation and purificati­on. Our level of developmen­t makes this data scandalous, but we can improve our water tradition. Our infrastruc­ture must think beyond the transporta­tion of water to consider the efficiency and the interconne­ction of the desalinati­on facilities in case of shortages. We have begun to work on these aspects, but the process has been put on hold although it deals with important issues for the next legislatur­e.

Decarboniz­ation of the economy in 2050 and a significan­t advance by 2030

How can the energy transition solve Spain’s dependence on imports of fossil fuels?

Spain is one of the countries with greater energy dependence from abroad due to the volume of imports of fossil fuels. However, we have a great potential to replace these fossil fuels with local renewable resources.

*This content was first published in The Business Year: Spain 2020

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