00:00 / 44:13
#1 Introduction to Energy Poverty and EU Policies
#1
Introduction to Energy Poverty and EU Policies
#2
Legal Frameworks vs. Budget Realities
00:44
#3
Anna's Background and Experience in Energy Poverty
02:53
#4
Challenges Faced by Solid Fuel Users
05:54
#5
Inequities in Funding and Subsidy Allocation
11:46
#6
The Need for Comprehensive Solutions
19:55
#7
Conclusion and Future Directions for Energy Policy
28:59
The Subsidy That Went to the Wrong Address — Anna Bajomi, FEANTSA
The EU's energy transition contains clear legal obligations to prioritise vulnerable households. The EPBD requires financial incentives to target energy-poor households first. The Energy Efficiency Directive requires member states to make the best possible use of public funding for low-income consumers. And yet without binding targeting requirements, public money flows to middle-income and affluent groups by institutional default — not by accident, but by design.
Anna Zsófia Bajomi, Energy Poverty Policy Officer at FEANTSA, traces the mechanism: post-financing schemes that assume households can pre-invest thousands of euros; eligibility criteria built around formal employment and debt-free status; CO₂ savings indicators easier to reach among better-off households. The outcome is predictable — and avoidable.
In this episode:
Why firewood users in Central and Eastern Europe remain invisible in EU statistics and crisis response, and how EU policy has perversely incentivised continued burning while punishing countries for the air pollution it causes
How renovation schemes including France's MaPrimeRenov structurally exclude the poorest through co-contribution requirements
The gap between EPBD and EED targeting obligations and what the MFF 2028–2034 actually delivers
Why untargeted public subsidies crowd out private finance rather than leverage it
New York State's 35% community benefit mandate as a governance reference for Europe
References: FEANTSA · European Energy Poverty Handbook · Jacques Delors Institute · EPBD Art. 17(18) · EED Art. 24(3) · MaPrimeRenov · New York State Climate Act
Marine Cornelis is the founder of Next Energy Consumer, a policy consultancy working on energy poverty, consumer rights, and housing at EU level. If you are working on a related mandate or research question, you can reach her at contact@nextenergyconsumer.eu
Energ' Ethic goes out every other week.
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