The revision of the Strategic Energy Technology (SET) Plan, adopted today, will help harmonise the original SET Plan strategic objectives with the European Green Deal, REPowerEU Plan and the Green Deal Industrial Plan – notably, the Net-Zero Industry Act. It will ensure a coordinated approach towards achieving Europe's decarbonisation goals, supporting strategic net-zero technologies, and building a sustainable and resilient energy future and industrial competitiveness.
Established in 2007, the SET Plan has been crucial in supporting the development of clean, efficient and cost-competitive energy technologies through coordination and collaboration in clean energy research and innovation among European industry, academia, and national governments.
While the updated SET Plan will continue to be essential for delivering on the fifth dimension of the Energy Union – that is, Research, Innovation and Competitiveness – it will also be firmly anchored within the European Research Area (ERA) framework.
With this revision, the Commission will take action in the following areas:
The Clean Energy Transition Partnership, a multilateral and strategic partnership of national and regional research, development and innovation programmes co-funded by Horizon Europe and national governments, will continue to support the implementation of the SET Plan activities and will be instrumental to underpin its extended scope.
The Commission will work closely with the SET Plan countries (currently all EU Member States, Iceland, Norway and Turkey), the SET Plan Steering Group and other relevant stakeholders, including new actors and task forces as necessary, to develop and deliver on the new measures and targets included in the Communication.
In 2007, the Commission launched the Strategic Energy Technology (SET) Plan as a first step to establish an energy technology policy for Europe. The SET Plan has ever since become a crucial policy tool for research and innovation in energy with Member States and Associated Countries.
The overall objective of the SET Plan is to provide a common vision, goals, and coordination in accelerating the development and deployment of efficient and cost-competitive clean technologies, and to enhance the EU's geopolitical resilience and security of energy supply. The SET Plan was updated in 2015 with six priorities in line with the Research Innovation and Competitiveness pillar of the Energy Union. It also plays a central role in guiding national energy research strategies, as reflected in the National Energy and Climate Plans.
It has contributed to effectively associate national efforts into industrial alliances and Important Projects of Common European Interest (IPCEIs), as for example the Battery Alliance and the IPCEI on Batteries. SET Plan countries have pooled more than €500 million in the co-funded Clean Energy Transition Partnership under Horizon Europe.