Accelerating Europe's Electrification: A Path to Energy Independence and Growth

Schneider Electric's new report highlights electrification's transformative potential in Europe, highlighting policy shifts and investments required for energy independence and affordability.

Schneider Electric has released an insightful new report underscoring the pivotal role electrification must play in shaping Europe’s energy future. With current electrification rates stagnating at 21%, Europe is lagging behind countries like China, which are swiftly advancing towards a more electrified society. This disparity in electrification progress is reflected in energy costs, where EU citizens pay three times more than their Chinese counterparts.

Entitled “Europe Energy Security and Competitiveness – Supercharging Electrification,” the report highlights that accelerated electrification could result in savings of €250 billion per year by 2040. Europe's energy trilemma—balancing affordability, security, and sustainability—remains a significant challenge. Fossil fuel import dependency keeps costs high and distances sustainability objectives, despite a commendable 37% drop in emissions since 1990.

The varied electrification pace across Europe is notable. While countries like the Nordics are leading in sectors such as transport and buildings, other nations are in the nascent stages of their electrification journey. Southern Europe excels in building electrification, contrasting with the industrial strides made by Western and Central Europe. To maintain competitiveness, Europe must amplify its electrification efforts.

The report highlights several policy levers essential for progress:

  1. Eliminating the existing price disparity between electricity and natural gas by phasing out fossil fuel subsidies and reforming energy taxation to encourage clean energy use.
  2. Facilitating swift access to investment by offering tailored incentives, especially targeting SMEs, and redirecting emissions trading scheme revenues towards electrification initiatives.
  3. Establishing robust local markets by mandating electrification in new buildings and industries, promoting rapid deployment of heat pumps and electric vehicles, and bolstering prosumer activities.
  4. Encouraging local development through sustainable public procurement, fast-tracking standardisation, and championing support for European innovation and manufacturing, ensuring economic and employment benefits are widely distributed.

Laurent Bataille, the Executive Vice President of Schneider Electric's Europe Operations, emphasised the report’s significance, highlighting, “This landmark research provides one of the most comprehensive analyses to date of Europe’s electrification potential and the policy actions needed to realise it. It underscores that electrification is vital—not only for achieving our climate ambitions, but for driving economic growth, energy independence, and industrial competitiveness. Europe must break free from electrification stagnation urgently. The technology is here, ready to deploy. Now, policy must incentivise and businesses must drive implementation to unlock the economic and environmental gains we need to see today.” 

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