WIT Press


TECHNOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL PERSPECTIVE ON LOCAL ENERGY COMMUNITIES DEVELOPMENT: A CASE STUDY IN THE BASQUE COUNTRY, SPAIN

Price

Free (open access)

Volume

265

Pages

10

Page Range

291 - 300

Published

2025

Paper DOI

10.2495/ESUS250231

Copyright

Author(s)

PABLO DE-AGUSTIN-CAMACHO, OLATZ NICOLAS-BUXENS, FELIX LARRINAGA

Abstract

Energy communities (ECs) enable citizens to collectively produce, consume, store, share and sell renewable energy, offering environmental, economic and social benefits. EU directives 2018/2001 and 2019/944 introduced Renewable and Citizen Energy Communities, promoting active citizen participation in the energy transition. While implementation varies across member states, ECs can support diverse projects using different technologies. Photovoltaic (PV) self-consumption has become the most popular, especially in southern Europe. However, citizens and public entities often face challenges in identifying clear pathways for local implementation, limiting the potential of ECs in many communities. Under the drOp project, an EC has been promoted in a social housing neighbourhood in Ermua, Basque Country, northern Spain, working in parallel in the technological and social perspectives. A high resolution solar resource map of the neighbourhood was carried out and the PV potential of the roofs were assessed (total potential 701 kW aggregating the useful surface of 41 buildings). After evaluating the roofs, a first facility was planned for the public school in the area, tendering a 40 kW collective PV self-consumption system. In parallel, a neighbourhood office was opened for raising awareness and providing energy efficiency assistance to the citizens, including energy bills assessing service (which in some cases provided higher savings than the participation on the EC). Diverse workshops with citizens were carried out over a year, co-creating with the public authorities the approach of the EC. After deciding the ownership, investment and governance model of the facility and the EC itself, an association has been created and an energy sharing agreement established legally. Currently there are 40 members participating and the current facility could share with up to 72 homes and/or local stores and the primary school.

Keywords

energy community, collective self-consumption, neighbourhood regeneration, social housing