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Resilient Wind Energy made in Europe – all components count
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The Net-Zero Industry Act (NZIA) aims to preserve the leadership of the Wind Energy sector by enhancing European manufacturing capacity for net-zero technologies (“to meet at least 40% of EU annual deployment needs by 2030”), addressing barriers to scaling up production in Europe. It seeks to increase the competitiveness of the net-zero technology sector and value chain, attract investments, and improve market access for clean tech in the EU. However, as reported by IEA the “non-binding nature of [the 40%] benchmark and the absence of clear policy instruments for its implementation” might put such ambition at risk. This document outlines the recommendations from diversified actors of the EU Wind Supply Chain to reinforce the NZIA texts of secondary legislation to be adopted by March 2025.
Signatories:
EUROFER, The European Steel Association
Offshore Wind Foundations Alliance (OWFA)
European Wind Tower Association (WTA)
Europacable
ArcelorMittal
Sif Group
GRI Renewables Industries
Chantiers de l’Atlantique
AG der Dillinger Hüttenwerke
DONAKO Ltd
Salzgitter AG
Westlake Epoxy BV
Full text available for download in the pdf below.
Brussels, 22 October - Ahead of the European Council meeting on 23 October, Europe’s steel and automotive industries — two strategic pillars of the EU economy — are issuing a joint call for a realistic and pragmatic pathway to transformation and keeping investments in Europe. Together, these sectors form the backbone of Europe’s industrial strength, supporting over 13 million jobs in automotive and 2.5 million in steel (directly and indirectly), and driving innovation across entire value chains.
Joint Statement
Strasbourg, 07 October 2025 – The new trade measure presented today by the European Commission is a long-awaited proposal to forcefully defend the European steel sector, in full respect of WTO rules, from unfair imports flooding the EU market due to massive global overcapacity. The provisions unveiled by the Commission respond to the needs of the sector and represent a real lifeline for EU steelmakers and steelworkers. The European Parliament and the Council should therefore adopt it as a matter of urgency to enable its entry into force at the beginning of 2026, says the European Steel Association (EUROFER).