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Recovery and Resilience Facility for clean energy

With support from the Recovery and Resilience Facility, EU countries can make the critical reforms and investments needed to rapidly end their dependence on Russian fossil fuels.

The Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF) is a temporary instrument, launched in 2021, to help the EU emerge stronger and more resilient from the coronavirus pandemic and increase the resilience of national economies. 

The facility in figures 

€650 billion
to invest in reforms and projects
42%
average % dedicated to the green transition per country
€184 billion
for energy-related measures

The RRF is the largest EU funding programme, with €650 billion committed overall. 

All EU countries must dedicate at least 37% of their Recovery and Resilience Plans (RRPs) to measures supporting the green transition, and by October 2025, they had exceeded this target, reaching an average of 42%.  

In total, climate expenditure amounts to around €275 billion, with more than €184 billion allocated to energy-related measures. 

Objective and result

The Recovery and Resilience Fund (RRF) has the two-fold objective of helping EU countries recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as bolstering their resilience and making our economies and societies greener, more digital and more competitive. It channels EU funding to implement the REPowerEU plan, accelerating the clean energy transition and boosting EU competitiveness. 

Through the RRF, the Commission raises funds by borrowing on the capital markets, issuing bonds on behalf of the EU, which are then available to EU countries for their implementation of ambitious reforms and investments that 

  • make their economies and societies more sustainable, resilient and prepared for the green transition and digital transition
  • address the challenges identified in country-specific recommendations under the European Semester framework of economic and social policy coordination

2025 RRF implementation report

The 2025 Annual Report on RRF implementation, published on 8 October 2025, shows that the RRF resulted in 33.4 million megawatt hours (MWh) of annual energy consumption being saved, over 110 gigawatt (GW) of additional renewable energy capacity installed, and over 915 000 new or upgraded refuelling and recharging points for clean vehicles. The number of enterprises it supports continues to grow and reached 4.5 million by the end of 2024. 

The equivalent of one third of all new renewable capacity deployed in the EU between 2021 and 2024 was supported by the RRF, which is expected to deliver 61 GW of newly installed renewable capacity. This will also save 15.8 billion cubic metres of natural gas – equivalent to a 16% reduction in Russian gas imports since 2021. Around 40 million households will be supplied with renewable electricity, and the RRF will modernise and construct at least 10 000 km of electricity grids.

The implementation of the RRF has progressed steadily. By the end of August 2025, €366 billion had been disbursed, representing over 55% of the total RRF funds. By October 2025, 44% of the milestones and targets from the RRPs had been fulfilled.

Reforms and investments

The Netherlands complemented investments and reforms, including an energy market reform package which will reduce congestion on the Dutch electricity grid, allocating €1.4 billion and subsidies for over 600 000 residential energy efficiency improvements, and support for the uptake of heat pumps. Poland amended existing rules to facilitate the establishment and operation of citizen energy communities, cooperatives and energy clusters. These reforms helped Poland achieve 23 GW of onshore wind and photovoltaic capacity, reflecting important progress in the deployment of renewable energy. Cyprus installed photovoltaic systems in 405 schools and the largest state hospital, along with thermal insulation, to facilitate the energy upgrading and increased energy efficiency of public buildings.  

Energy efficiency

26 EU countries included investments in energy efficiency in their RRPs. Portugal and Slovakia allocated more than 30% of their RRP funds to this area, followed by the Netherlands and France, with 29% and 26% respectively allocated to energy efficiency. In absolute terms, Spain, Italy, France and Poland are the countries allocating the largest amounts to energy efficiency measures. 

By December 2024, about 33,4 million MWh of savings in the EU’s annual energy consumption were achieved thanks to support from the RRF. That’s equivalent to the annual consumption of 20.9 million Europeans, according to the Commission’s 2025 RRF Annual Report.   

Renewables

Luxembourg allocated its entire RRP energy-related funding to support renewable energy. In absolute amounts, Italy, Spain and Poland are the countries allocating the largest amounts to renewable energy sources. 

Energy infrastructure 

Approximately €25 billion is allocated to support electricity networks, storage and smart meters, and €1.6 billion to support 3 gas infrastructure projects needed to address immediate security of supply concerns in Croatia, Italy and Poland.

For example, the Czech plan includes reforms to maximise available grid capacity and facilitate the connection of renewables to the grid for self-consumption.

Hydrogen 

Germany has allocated the largest share of its RRP energy-related measures (about 44%) to renewable and low-carbon hydrogen.

National Recovery and Resilience Plans 2025

The Council has approved all 27 revised Recovery and Resilience Plans (RRPs), each of which includes a REPowerEU chapter.  

Implementation and expected results

The RRPs will help EU countries achieve the 2030 targets for renewables and energy efficiency, and pave the way towards reaching the EU’s objectives for 2040.  

Already by 2026, the RRPs are expected to deliver tangible results, such as  

  • 60 GW of additional renewable capacity, including more than 15 GW of offshore wind
  • 28 million MWh of savings in annual primary energy consumption
  • the modernisation of 14 000 km of electricity transmission and distribution lines 

REPowerEU 

The RRF supports a wide range of priorities under the dedicated REPowerEU chapters, including boosting energy efficiency and industrial decarbonisation, addressing infrastructure bottlenecks, enabling zero-emission transport, and incentivising the reduction of energy demand.  

The largest share of REPowerEU chapters funding (€35 billion) targets measures to improve energy efficiency, accelerate renewable deployment, and support industrial decarbonisation. Another €17 billion is allocated to tackling critical energy-system bottlenecks, such as insufficient grid capacity, lack of cross-border interconnections, and limited storage capabilities, while accelerating the shift to zero-emission mobility. A further €6 billion is allocated for measures that incentivise reductions in energy demand.  

Examples of measures included in the REPowerEU chapters, with completed milestones and targets  

Reforms: 

Germany enacted a key reform to accelerate the deployment of offshore wind energy power plants. The reform removes bottlenecks in planning and approval processes and increases the ambition for offshore wind energy generation from 40 GW by 2040 to 70 GW by 2045.  

Portugal set up the National Energy Poverty Observatory, a dedicated body to oversee and drive efforts to alleviate energy poverty in Portugal. The reform will help eradicate energy poverty in Portugal by analysing and developing policies, as well as by monitoring, supervising, coordinating and reporting on the implementation of the Long-term Energy Poverty Strategy. 

Czechia adopted the third legislative amendment to the Energy Act under REPowerEU (LEX RES III) to establish a regulatory framework for flexibility services, promoting innovative solutions to optimise energy flows and integrate renewables. Building on prior reforms that accelerated permitting, created energy communities, and launched the Electricity Data Centre, Czechia also introduced a framework for renewable acceleration areas. Since the introduction of the RRP, renewable energy capacity in Czechia has increased by approximately 46%.  

Investments: 

Slovakia now has an operational Energy Data Centre, improving the preconditions for the connection of renewable energy sources by streamlining required data. This enables the aggregation of flexibility while improving the conditions for energy communities and sharing of renewable energy sources.  

Estonia signed a co-financing agreement to expand its electricity distribution network by 160 MW, enabling greater integration of renewable energy sources and strengthening the country’s energy security.  

Italy has awarded all contracts for the construction of 511 kilometres of high-voltage cables connecting Caracoli to Eboli. This strategic infrastructure project will reinforce the national transmission grid, improve electricity flows between regions, and facilitate the integration of renewable energy production. 

The RRPs are a significant part of the measures included in the National Energy and Climate Plans (NECPs). The measures included in the REPowerEU chapters, and more generally in the RRPs, will also bring tangible results aligned with the EU Solar Energy Strategy, the Wind Power Package, the Action Plan on electricity grids and the recommendation and guidance on speeding up permit-granting for renewable energy and related infrastructure projects.