Closed

Support services for energy communities

LIFE Project Grants

Basic Information

Identifier
LIFE-2025-CET-ENERCOM
Programme
LIFE Clean Energy Transition
Programme Period
2021 - 2027
Status
Closed (31094503)
Opening Date
April 24, 2025
Deadline
September 23, 2025
Deadline Model
single-stage
Budget
€7,000,000
Min Grant Amount
Max Grant Amount
Expected Number of Grants
Keywords
LIFE-2025-CET-ENERCOMLIFE-2025-CET

Description

Expected Impact:

Proposals submitted under this topic should present the concrete impacts that will be achieved by the planned activities.

Proposals should quantify the topic specific impacts (where relevant), the LIFE CET common indicators and any other project-specific performance indicators which they consider relevant for their action.

The impacts should be quantified for the end of the project and for 5 years after its end. Figures reported will be assessed considering the context in which they are generated and should be credibly linked to the foreseen activities.

The indicators for this topic include:

  • Number of energy community services fully implemented, operational and tested before the end of the action. Their testing must trigger the first energy community project investments.
  • Number of energy communities benefitting from the support (including new and existing entities).
  • Amount of in-person support made available to energy community project developers (full-time equivalent person months).
  • Number of energy communities established thanks to the services (detailing if they are RECs or CECs).
  • Number of members (citizens or organisations) who have joined the energy communities because of the support provided.
  • Number and type of stakeholders with increased skills.
  • Number of local and regional authorities committed to replicate best practice experiences.
  • (Where relevant) Number of groupings of energy communities mutualizing services.

Proposals should also quantify their impacts related to the following common indicators for the LIFE CET sub-programme:

  • Primary energy savings triggered by the project in GWh/year
  • Final energy savings triggered by the project in GWh/year
  • Renewable energy generation triggered by the project (in GWh/year), specifying the type of renewable energy triggered
  • Reduction of greenhouse gas emissions (in tCO2-eq/year)
  • Investments in sustainable energy (energy efficiency and renewable energy) triggered by the project (cumulative, in million Euro).

Funding rate

Other Action Grants (OAGs) — 95%

Objective:

This topic aims to establish or expand services supporting the set-up and growth of energy communities.

Energy communities have been recognised as key players in the EU energy system for their potential role in meeting the 2030 and 2050 energy and climate objectives. Moreover, the European Commission is working on a Citizen Energy Package that, among other models of citizen engagement in the energy transition, will propose support mechanisms for the emergence and growth of energy communities in Europe.

Energy community projects can channel citizens’ and local authorities’ investment into renewables and energy efficiency while ensuring local ownership of energy assets. At the same time, energy communities have the potential to deliver other community benefits ranging from lower energy prices or local employment to social cohesion and inclusion. However, developing and realising energy community projects can be complex. In some cases, this is due to the regulatory and policy context (e.g. changing national support schemes for renewables, burdensome permitting, heavy administrative procedures, etc.). In others, challenges are linked to the lack of information and knowledge, limited access to finance, or difficulties in engaging citizens and establishing effective governance and decision-making structures. These hurdles prevent energy communities around Europe from reaching their full potential.

Beyond the work being done by Member States to define enabling frameworks for energy communities, an increasing number of local and regional authorities are creating services to support the emergence and development of energy communities and collective energy projects in their territories. In addition, in some contexts, energy community stakeholders are getting together to help each other by mutualising services and supporting other communities in project development. They do so by, for example, offering technical assistance, mutualising operation and maintenance activities, expanding access to financial instruments and new business models, or establishing partnerships to make sure enabling frameworks for energy communities adapt to the needs on the ground. These groupings have first-hand experience of the hurdles projects can face and can deliver effective assistance to stimulate community projects. In coordination with local and regional governments, they are emerging as new actors who could deliver effective support services for energy communities.

Scope:

Proposed actions should focus on establishing or expanding support services aimed at facilitating the set-up of new energy communities and the growth of existing ones.

The entity (or entities) in charge of delivering the support services should be clearly identified and justified. The support services can be provided by relevant local actors such as local or regional governments, energy agencies or umbrella energy community organisations (e.g. federations, associations of energy cooperatives). Proposals involving the mutualisation or sharing of services by umbrella energy community organisations or groupings of energy communities are encouraged.

Services should focus on supporting renewable energy communities (RECs) according to the revised Renewable Energy Directive ((EU) 2018/2001)[1] and/or citizen energy communities (CECs) according to the Directive on common rules for the internal electricity market ((EU) 2019/944)[2]. Proposals should indicate which types of energy communities are targeted.

The services delivered to energy community projects must involve direct technical support with personalised advice through the different phases of project development (e.g. access to finance, business model definition support, legal advice, energy commercialisation, assistance for the operational phase). Services could also aim at scaling-up and professionalising energy communities using approaches such as peer-to-peer support and twinning programmes among communities with different levels of experience.

Proposals should specify the type of support provided and the way in which it will be implemented including staffing and communication channels. A constant physical presence is not mandatory (as support can also be provided in other settings such as temporary counters or regular meetings with project promoters). Approaches including mainly the provision of generic information and advice, access to guidance materials, and/or focusing on on-line platforms and tools without or with limited direct human interaction are not considered relevant to the scope of this topic.

The service design is to be detailed and justified considering the specific local/regional challenges to be addressed. Some of those obstacles may be linked to energy community project development (e.g. cooperation with Distribution System Operators), but proposals can also aim at tackling other local challenges (e.g. rural depopulation, the need to speed up renovations, tackling energy vulnerability, facilitating cooperation between citizens and Small and Medium-sized Enterprises).

Beyond the above, all proposals should:

  • Demonstrate the support of the stakeholders who are necessary to ensure the success of the action through direct participation in the Consortium or a convincing strategy for their involvement (in particular, for local or regional authorities).
  • Provide a credible approach regarding the way in which the service will reach and engage energy community project developers. This approach should be adapted to the specificities of the territories targeted and consider how to include diverse types of members.
  • Foresee adequate training and capacity building for the staff delivering the services or actors needed for project implementation including (where relevant) local and regional authority staff, community members and installers. The objectives and content of training activities should be outlined in the proposal.
  • Outline a compelling plan to ensure the continuity of the support beyond the lifetime of the project.

Proposals should include an explanation of the degree of development of communities in the areas targeted. Priority will be given to proposals focusing on geographic areas in which energy communities are less developed or on types of activities where fewer community experiences exist (e.g. community heating and cooling, citizen-led renovation, flexibility).

Proposals must ensure their complementarity to existing national enabling frameworks and local support for energy communities. They should also complement and make use of existing resources and networks as relevant (e.g. the European Energy Communities Facility, the Citizen Energy Advisory Hub).

Proposals are not expected to develop any new tools[3], databases, or digital platforms unless their added value compared to existing ones is clearly justified and their potential scale-up beyond the project convincingly addressed.

The Commission considers that proposals requesting a contribution from the EU of up to 1.75 EUR million would allow the specific objectives to be addressed appropriately. Nonetheless, this does not preclude submission and selection of proposals requesting other amounts.

Proposals under this topic must be submitted by at least 3 applicants (beneficiaries; not affiliated entities) from 3 different eligible countries.

[1] Directive (EU) 2018/2001 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2018 on the promotion of the use of energy from renewable sources.

[2] Directive (EU) 2019/944 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 5 June 2019 on common rules for the internal market for electricity and amending Directive 2012/27/EU.

[3] Please consider, among other sources, the tools listed under the Toolbox of the European Energy Communities Repository before proposing the development of new tools: https://energy-communities-repository.ec.europa.eu/energy-communities-repository-support/energy-communities-repository-toolbox-0_en

Eligibility & Conditions

Conditions

1. Admissibility Conditions: Proposal page limit and layout

described in section 5 of the call document.

Proposal page limits and layout: described in Part B of the Application Form available in the Submission System.

2. Eligible Countries

described in section 6 of the call document.

3. Other Eligible Conditions

described in section 6 of the call document.

4. Financial and operational capacity and exclusion

described in section 7 of the call document.

5a. Evaluation and award: Submission and evaluation processes

described section 8 of the call document and the Online Manual.

5b. Evaluation and award: Award criteria, scoring and thresholds

described in section 9 of the call document.

5c. Evaluation and award: Indicative timeline for evaluation and grant agreement

described in section 4 of the call document.

6. Legal and financial set-up of the grants

described in section 10 of the call document.

Support & Resources

Please read carefully all provisions below before the preparation of your application.

We want to draw your attention to the possibility to get support from your National Contact Point (NCP).

Funding & Tenders Portal FAQ – Submission of proposals.

IT Helpdesk – Contact the IT helpdesk for questions such as forgotten passwords, access rights and roles, technical aspects of submission of proposals, etc.

Online Manual – Step-by-step online guide through the Portal processes from proposal preparation and submission to reporting on your on-going project. Valid for all 2021-2027 programmes.

Info session recordings & presentations

Frequently Asked Questions

Latest Updates

Last Changed: September 25, 2025

Call LIFE-2025-CET has closed on 23 September 2025.

319 proposals have been submitted.

The breakdown per topic is:

  • LIFE-2025-CET-BETTERRENO: 26 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-BUILDSKILLS: 14 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-DHC: 28 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-ENERCOM: 40 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-ENERPOV: 22 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-EUCF: 3 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-INDUSTRY: 31 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-LOCAL: 44 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-OSS: 40 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-PDA: 34 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-POLICY: 8 proposals
  • LIFE-2025-CET-PRIVAFIN: 29 proposals

Evaluation results are expected to be communicated in February 2026.

Last Changed: June 18, 2025

The Frequently Asked Questions of Call LIFE-2025-CET are now available here.

Last Changed: April 24, 2025
The submission session is now available for: LIFE-2025-CET-BUILDSKILLS, LIFE-2025-CET-OSS, LIFE-2025-CET-ENERPOV, LIFE-2025-CET-DHC, LIFE-2025-CET-ENERCOM, LIFE-2025-CET-POLICY, LIFE-2025-CET-PRIVAFIN, LIFE-2025-CET-PDA, LIFE-2025-CET-INDUSTRY, LIFE-2025-CET-BETTERRENO, LIFE-2025-CET-LOCAL, LIFE-2025-CET-EUCF
Support services for energy communities | Grantalist