On Friday 1st September, Cyprus submitted a request to the European Commission to modify its recovery and resilience plan, to which it also wishes to add a REPowerEU chapter, a press release issued by the Commission says.
It is noted that Cyprus' proposed REPowerEU chapter covers measures related to energy efficiency in buildings, the electrification of transport, and research and development in the field of the green transition. Two new reforms and two new investments to deliver on the REPowerEU objectives are included, as well as five existing measures which have been scaled up.
''Cyprus' proposed modification of the plan also foresees the removal of seven investments from the original plan, of which one is transferred to the loan-financed part of the plan, and the modification of around 50 planned measures'', the press release reads.
It is further added that Cyprus' request to modify its plan is based on the need to factor in the high inflation experienced in 2022, supply chain disruptions and the downward revision of its maximum Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF) grant allocation, from pound 1.01 billion to pound 0.92 billion. The revision is part of the June 2022 update to the RRF grants allocation key and reflects Cyprus' comparatively better economic outcome in 2020 and 2021 than initially foreseen.
It is also noted that Cyprus has requested to transfer its share of the Brexit Adjustment Reserve, amounting to pound 52 million, to its recovery and resilience plan. Together with Cyprus' RRF and REPowerEU grants allocation (pound 0.92 billion and pound 52.5 million, respectively), and with the amount of its original RRF loans request of pound 0.2 billion, these funds make the submitted, modified plan worth pound 1.22 billion.
The Commission has now up to two months to assess whether the modified plan still fulfils all the assessment criteria in the RRF Regulation. If the Commission's assessment is positive, it will make a proposal for an amended Council Implementing Decision to reflect the changes to the Cypriot plan. Member States will then have up to four weeks to endorse the Commission's assessment, the press release concludes
Source: Cyprus News Agency