For the second time in less than five years, Europeans are paying the price of Europe’s dependency on imported fossil fuels. AccelerateEU is the Commission’s toolbox to bring immediate relief to European households and industries, especially the most vulnerable ones, while putting Europe on a steady pathway to energy independence. Since the escalation of the conflict in the Middle East, the EU has spent an additional €24 billion on energy imports due to higher prices – without receiving a single extra molecule of energy.

The current geopolitical situation is a stark reminder that accelerating the transition to cleansecure and affordable energy is an economic and security imperative. ‘AccelerateEU’ presents both short-term and structural measures with longer-term effect to further reduce dependency on volatile fossil fuel markets and build Europe’s resilience against future risks based on homegrown clean energy and electrification.

Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, said : “The choices we make today will shape our ability to face the challenges of today and the crises of tomorrow. Our AccelerateEU strategy will bring both immediate and more structural relief measures to European citizens and businesses. We must accelerate the shift to homegrown, clean energies. This will give us energy independence and security, and mean we are better able to weather geopolitical storms.”

The Commission proposes the following actions:

Coordination is key. The Commission will ensure that measures at Member State level will be done in full coordination. This includes refilling of underground gas storages, use of flexibilities in filling rules, or any exceptional releases of oil stocks. Oil and Gas Coordination groups meet frequently to ensure full situational awareness among Member States. National emergency measures and measures aimed at ensuring the availability of jet fuel and diesel, including the availability of oil refinery production capacities, should be closely coordinated.

A new Fuel Observatory will be established to track EU production, imports, exports and stock levels of transport fuels. This will enable swift identification of potential shortages and, in the case of emergency stock releases, inform targeted measures to maintain balanced fuel distribution. To mitigate the impact of high fuel prices and possible fuel shortages on the EU aviation sector, the Commission will also provide clarity on existing flexibilities within the EU aviation framework.

Timely, targeted and temporary measures. Protecting consumers, including industry, from price peaks can include targeted income support schemes, energy vouchers and social leasing schemes, lowering excise duties on electricity for vulnerable households. The Commission will also adopt a State Aid Temporary Framework, which will provide additional flexibility for national governments, including emergency measures to support the most exposed economic sectors.

Accelerating the shift to homegrown clean energy to replace oil, gas and fossil transport fuels. By the summer, the Commission will present an Electrification Action Plan. It will include an ambitious electrification target and measures to remove barriers to the electrification of the industrial, transport and building sectors. Swift implementation of the Sustainable Transport Investment Plan is key to accelerate the rollout of sustainable aviation fuels.

Stepping up the grids system. Electrification needs to be accompanied by a grid network which is fit for purpose. First steps are ensuring that current legislation is fully implemented and the negotiations on the European Grids Package are concluded swiftly. Maximising existing renewable energy infrastructure is another action. Rapid repowering of big wind farms and renewable plants, including offshore wind parks and hydropower plants can quickly deliver much needed additional relief. The Commission will also present a legislative proposal on network charges and taxation, ensuring among others electricity is taxed less than fossil fuels.

Boosting investments. Significant resources are available at EU level, such as those under the Recovery and Resilience Facility (‘RRF’: €219 billion) and cohesion policy funds. In the current crisis, speed and impact are paramount. The Commission will assist Member States to make maximum use of available EU funding. However, public money alone will not cover the significant investment needs (€660 billion a year until 2030) for the energy transition. To mobilise private investments, the Commission therefore adopted a Clean Energy Investment Strategy in March 2026. The Commission will organise a Clean Energy Investment Summit bringing together the financial services industry, including major institutional investors, industrial leaders, project developers and public financiers to accelerate private financing.

Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission

 The choices we make today will shape our ability to face the challenges of today and the crises of tomorrow. Our AccelerateEU strategy will bring both immediate and more structural relief measures to European citizens and businesses. We must accelerate the shift to homegrown, clean energies. This will give us energy independence and security, and mean we are better able to weather geopolitical storms.

Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission
Teresa Ribera, Executive Vice-President for Clean, Just and Competitive Transition

 There is no alternative to the Green Deal when it comes to security and competitiveness. Once again, citizens and businesses are paying the price of our dependency. This communication aims at reinforcing EU coordination and protect the most vulnerable while accelerating deployment of homegrown clean energy and electrification to make a real and lasting difference.

Teresa Ribera, Executive Vice-President for Clean, Just and Competitive Transition
Dan Jørgensen, Commissioner for Energy and Housing

 Europe faces yet another fossil energy crisis. This must be a wake-up call and a turning point – when Europe steps away from fossil fuel dependence, and steps towards clean energy autonomy. With AccelerateEU we support our Member States in providing immediate relief to those struggling the most in our society, while doubling down on the clean transition and electrification. This is the only lasting way to guarantee stable, secure, clean and affordable energy supplies to all Europeans.

Dan Jørgensen, Commissioner for Energy and Housing
Apostolos Tzitzikostas, Commissioner for Sustainable Transport and Tourism

 With today’s AccelerateEU Plan, we are acting to address the consequences of the Middle East crisis and ensure that our transport system remains competitive and resilient. We will step up coordination to optimise transport fuel distribution across Europe, starting with jet fuel. The Plan also provides clarity on certain flexibilities that should help the EU’s aviation sector deal with the consequences of flight cancellations and other disruptions. We will work closely with Member States and stakeholders to limit the burden of rising costs on citizens and businesses. Ultimately, we need to make our transport system and supply chains more resilient to future disruptions; this Plan is another step in that direction.

Apostolos Tzitzikostas, Commissioner for Sustainable Transport and Tourism

Source: European Commission