Netherlands: Consumer portal publishes overview of negative feed-in tariffs from January 1, 2027

Energievergelijk.nl
© Rolf Schulten / PHOTON

The Dutch consumer portal »Energievergelijk.nl« has updated its overview of feed-in tariffs for solar power from Dutch electricity suppliers as of January 1, 2027. From this date onwards, the billing regulation for solar installations will be abolished in the Netherlands. Consumers will then no longer be able to offset the electricity they feed into the grid against their electricity purchases from their supplier. Instead, they will receive a feed-in tariff for the electricity they supply. They will also have to pay feed-in costs. For some electricity suppliers, the feed-in tariff will be lower than the feed-in costs, resulting in a negative tariff for the solar power fed into the grid. According to the overview from Energievergelijk.nl, the energy suppliers Innova Energy, Just Energy and Mega are all in the negative range, with tariffs of minus 5.58 ct/kWh and minus 10.4 ct/kWh respectively. Many other energy suppliers are just in the positive range, offering a net remuneration of only a few tenths of a cent.

The portal calculated the remuneration for four energy suppliers based on a feed-in of 2,500 kWh. According to these calculations, plant operators would receive €12.50 from Budget Energy, €6.25 each from Eneco, Oxxio and Greenchoice Delta Energy, and €6.00 from Vattenfall for the electricity fed into the grid. Innova Energy and Just Energy, on the other hand, charge €139.50.

© PHOTON

Übersicht Energievergelijk.nl

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