France: Bidding session for 2 GW of solar projects

France is launching a bidding round for more than 2 GW of solar projects in order to support the development of the sector and to respect the trajectories set out in the EPP. The Syndicat des énergies renouvelables and ENERPLAN welcome this ambitious and responsive decision.

Share:

Gain full professional access to energynews.pro from 4.90$/month.
Designed for decision-makers, with no long-term commitment.

Over 30,000 articles published since 2021.
150 new market analyses every week to decode global energy trends.

Monthly Digital PRO PASS

Immediate Access
4.90$/month*

No commitment – cancel anytime, activation in 2 minutes.

*Special launch offer: 1st month at the indicated price, then 14.90 $/month, no long-term commitment.

Annual Digital PRO Pass

Full Annual Access
99$/year*

To access all of energynews.pro without any limits

*Introductory annual price for year one, automatically renewed at 149.00 $/year from the second year.

The French government announces atender session for the month of June, with a record volume of more than 2 GW of solar projects (1.5 GW ground-mounted and 800 MW rooftop). This decision comes after a difficult period of high failure rates in recent tenders for ground and rooftop segments. These failures were mainly caused by changes in the specifications, which resulted in non-compliance of the submitted files.

Tenders for carbon neutrality: the importance of the government’s decision for renewable energies

The Syndicat des énergies renouvelables (SER) and ENERPLAN welcome this ambitious and reactive decision of the government in the context of the energy emergency. This record volume session will not delay the development of the solar industry in France. It is also expected to do better than in 2022 and make up for the failure rate of the previous session.

SER and ENERPLAN stress the importance of this decision in order to respect the trajectories set out in the Multiannual Energy Program (PPE) and put the country on the path to carbon neutrality. Renewable energies need visibility and ambition, especially in a context where discussions on our energy future are entering a pivotal phase.

Renewable energy industry in France: the key role of the Syndicat des énergies renouvelables and ENERPLAN

The Syndicat des énergies renouvelables has 480 members, representing a sector that generates more than 150,000 jobs. It is the professional organization that brings together the manufacturers of all the renewable energy sectors in France. Its objective is to defend the rights and interests of its members, to strengthen the ties that unite them, to develop the industrial sector of renewable energies in France and to promote the creation of jobs and added value on the national territory.

ENERPLAN represents the whole of the industrial and commercial solar offer in France, including industrialists, contractors, design offices, installers, architects, energy providers, etc. Its objective is to promote and develop solar energy in France. ENERPLAN represents and defends solar professionals, and leads, structures and promotes the French solar industry.

The announced merger between Anglo American and Teck forms Anglo Teck, a new copper-focused leader structured for growth, with a no-premium share structure and a $4.5bn special dividend.
Voltalia launches a transformation programme targeting a return to profit from 2026, built on a refocus of activities, a new operating structure and self-financed growth of 300 to 400 MW per year.
Ineos Energy ends all projects in the UK, citing unstable taxation and soaring energy costs, and redirects its investments to the US, where the company has just allocated £3bn to new assets.
Eskom forecasts a load-shedding-free summer after covering 97% of winter demand, supported by 4000 MW added capacity and reduced operating expenses.
GE Vernova will cut 600 jobs in Europe, with the Belfort gas turbine site in France particularly affected, amid financial growth and strategic reorganisation.
SOLV Energy expands its nationwide services in the United States with the acquisitions of Spartan Infrastructure and SDI Services, consolidating its presence across all independent power markets.
Tokenised asset platform Plural secures $7.13mn to accelerate financing of distributed infrastructure including solar, storage, and data centres.
Santander Alternative Investments has invested in Corinex to accelerate the deployment of its smart grid solutions, aiming to address growing utility needs in Europe and the Americas.
Driven by grid modernisation and industrial automation, the global control transformer market could reach $1.48bn in 2030, with projections indicating steady growth in energy-intensive sectors.
A report from energy group Edison highlights structural barriers slowing renewable deployment in Italy, threatening its ability to meet 2030 decarbonisation targets.
ADNOC Group CEO Dr Sultan Al Jaber has been named 2025 CEO of the Year by his global chemical industry peers, recognising his role in the company’s industrial expansion and international investments.
Swedish renewable energy developer OX2 has appointed Matthias Taft as its new chief executive officer, succeeding Paul Stormoen, who led the company since 2011 and will now join the board of directors.
Driven by distributed solar and offshore wind, renewable energy investments rose 10% year-on-year despite falling financing for large-scale projects.
Australian Oilseeds Holdings was granted a deadline extension until 30 September to comply with the Nasdaq’s equity requirements, avoiding immediate delisting from the exchange.
Fermi America has closed $350mn in financing led by Macquarie to accelerate the development of its HyperGridâ„¢ energy campus, focused on artificial intelligence and high-performance data applications.
Soluna Holdings launched two energy projects in Texas, reaching one gigawatt of cumulative capacity for its data centres, marking a new stage in the development of computing infrastructure powered by renewable energy.
Eneco’s Supervisory Board has appointed Martijn Hagens as the next Chief Executive Officer. He will succeed interim CEO Kees Jan Rameau, effective from 1 March 2026.
With $28 billion in planned investments, hyperscaler expansion in Japan reshapes grid planning amid rising tensions between digital growth and infrastructure capacity.
The suspension of the Revolution Wind farm triggers a sharp decline in Ørsted’s stock, now trading at around 26 USD, increasing the financial stakes for the group amid a capital increase.
Hydro-Québec reports net income of C$2.3 billion in the first half of 2025, up more than 20%, driven by a harsh winter and an effective arbitrage strategy on external markets.

Log in to read this article

You'll also have access to a selection of our best content.