Self-consumption photovoltaic systems in Greece must add remote control devices – Balkan Green Energy News

Photo: Senivpetro on Freepik
Published
January 16, 2026
Country

Author

Comments
0
Print
Share
Published:
January 16, 2026
Country:

Author

Comments:
0
Print
Share
The Hellenic Distribution Network Operator (HEDNO or DEDDIE) announced that owners of self-consumption installations of over 400 kW have eight months, until September 15, to make necessary upgrades. Set point equipment includes specialized telemetering devices that the network operator uses for remote control and curtailment of solar power production.
Such equipment was first added in 2024 in other categories of photovoltaics, to ensure that HEDNO can dial down production at times when renewable energy production exceeds demand in the country. The effort is aimed at ensuring system stability and avoiding blackouts such as the one that happened in Spain last April.
According to Energypress, so far 4,300 MW of renewables units connected to the distribution network have added set-point equipment, out of a total of 5,500 MW deemed necessary. The authorities are aiming for the majority of the capacity to be ready by spring to avoid overcapacity. It’s a season that traditionally brings high renewable energy production and low demand in Greece. In 2024 and 2025, very low wholesale prices and high curtailments became a regular occurrence in the springtime.
As for the transmission network, all required renewable electricity plants have made the necessary upgrades.
HEDNO said the new requirement includes units both in the net metering and virtual net metering regimes, as well as the ones with and without storage.
Once proper upgrades have taken place, producers must submit a notification form to the distribution operator, along with necessary technical documents. Owners who do not comply in time, will be subject to disconnection from the grid, HEDNO said.
Its goal is to make horizontal curtailments from now on, only reducing production levels across photovoltaics, without having to shut down some of them entirely.
Be the first one to comment on this article.
Stay informed. In your Inbox once a week.

16 January 2026 – Bulgaria joined Finland as a host country for renewables projects funded by Luxembourg, under the RENEWFM program for 2026

16 January 2026 – Electricity capacity in Turkey reached 122 GW in 2025, of which 62% was from renewables, according to the SHURA Energy Transition Center

16 January 2026 – EUSEW Young Energy Ambassadors explore how energy communities and community-benefit clauses can help citizens fairly join Europe’s clean energy transition.

16 January 2026 – Iron and steel dominated the CBAM imports declared in the first reporting window, January 1-6, according to the European Commission
Email: office@balkangreenenergynews.com
Phone: +381 65 88 50 557
© CENTER FOR PROMOTION OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 2008-2020.
website developed by ogitive

source

This entry was posted in Renewables. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply