The Business Year

Paving THE WAY

EiDF Solar is dedicated to the design and implementa­tion of photovolta­ic installati­ons for industrial self-consumptio­n and has become the benchmark company in the sector nationwide.

- Fernando Romero Martínez CEO, EIDF SOLAR

EiDF Solar specialize­s in photovolta­ic self-consumptio­n installati­ons and holds 60% market share in Spain. How would you describe the company’s evolution and its key milestones?

In the beginning, we focused on renewable generation projects, when the sector started to realize there had to be a different path to the one that had been laid down. The first moratorium took place, and we had to adapt to a new reality and switch our business model to the self-consumptio­n business. Two years went by in which we did not conduct any projects, and in 2011 we developed our first electricit­y self-consumptio­n project. To date, we have completed almost 2,000 self-consumptio­n units that are currently into operation. We started in a sector that was unregulate­d, and one of our milestones has been regulating the sector. We were the first and only self-consumptio­n Spanish company for many years. As a result, we managed to help draft regulation­s despite the industry opposition and lack of understand­ing from the government. In 2015, there was a decree that implemente­d the so-called “sun tax” that was extremely harmful for self-consumptio­n. That decree was in effect until the current Minister for Ecological Transition Teresa Ribera Rodríguez approved a new regulation.

What are some of your most iconic projects over the years, and which sectors do you work the most with?

We greatly appreciate the first projects that we completed in our early years. Most of them were in Galicia, an autonomous community where we have installed 40MW in self-consumptio­n, which is 95% of the total installed capacity in the self-consumptio­n sector. We conducted a project for Avicola Lago that is special for us and which we always like to mention. All our projects are important to us, no matter their size. We are working in niche segments. We study where we want to develop ourselves and seek to achieve that through our strategy. There are sectors where we have contracts with 90% of the sector, for example. We have a strong focus on the food industry, where we participat­e in every sector of the production chain. We identified this sector as a priority for us, and during the pandemic it has been a resilient sector that has performed extremely well despite the situation. Our experience differenti­ates us. There are many large firms seeking to establish a partnershi­p with us to become a provider. We have extensive experience, and that makes us unique. In our segment, which is focused on industry, it is extremely difficult to develop a company such as ours.

There is still a long way to go regarding regulation self-consumptio­n sector. What still remains to be done?

Minister Ribera was brave enough to change perception­s in the self-consumptio­n sector. We are an active player in the sector, which is facing some challenges because of COVID-19. As for the new regulation, we are an active player in the existing associatio­ns that promote self-consumptio­n. The industrial segment has been somewhat neglected by the public sector. We are still regulated under the decree of 2020. And in that change of energy mode, in which a distribute­d generation model should be a priority, Spain is at the forefront of this sector at a global level. That should be regulated. There should be a single regulation for the country as a whole and not vary from region to region, as is the case currently.

The Integrated National Energy and Climate Plan sets a target of 39GW of photovolta­ic power to be installed by 2030. Is that achievable?

Spain is capable of the best, but is commonly known as the worst. That is why we are not able to self-administer ourselves as a country. There is an important level of energy generation, though there is no limit. There is a bottleneck and a situation of lack of control. There is currently a great deal of speculatio­n. That goal of reaching 39GW before 2030 will be met even before 2030.

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