Part-financed by The European Union
European Regional Development Fund and European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument
Bioenergy Promotion has already achieved many results and some of them are highlighted here. The project is coordinated by the Swedish Energy Agency, and is divided in five different work packages. It is funded from three different sources.
Yearly project conferences
Kaunas 25- 26 November 2010: Promoting sustainable bioenergy production and use - policies, showcases and business solutions in the Baltic Sea Region
Helsinki 26-27 November 2009: Bioenergy in the Renewable Energy Action Plans - Policy Dialogue in Baltic Sea Region
Final Report in Task 3.1- Published 16th of June 2010
Sustainable bioenergy production, defining principles and criteria
Mapping The Baltic Sea Region on Developments – compilation of questionnaires
The project management is coordinated by the Swedish Energy Agency (STEM) and will be run in five different work packages. Each work package is under the responsibility of a single partner who is referred to as the Work Package Leader. He/she organises the suitable contacts between the partners and is in charge of producing the deliverables, defined in each work package. The work package leader reports to the project co-ordinator. The WP leader is a member of the "Project Steering Committee". More information about the different roles of the partners.
The Bioenergy Promotion Project is a part of The European Union's Baltic Sea Region Programme 2007-2013 and are funded from three different sources as displayed in the tabell below.
| Source | Funding [million Euro] |
|---|---|
| European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) | 3,3 |
| Norwegian funding | 0,38 |
| European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI) | 0,11 |
The European Union's Baltic Sea Region Programme 2007-2013 promotes regional development through transnational cooperation. Eleven countries around the Baltic Sea work together to find joint solutions to common problems. The programme is a part of Interreg which is a Community initiative which aims to stimulate interregional cooperation in the European Union. It started in 1989, and is financed under the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF).
Strategic objective: to make the Baltic Sea region an attractive place to invest, work and live in
The Programme co-finances projects in fields of:
Priority 1: Fostering innovations
Priority 2: Internal and external accessibility
Priority 3: Baltic Sea as a common resource
Priority 4: Attractive & competitive cities and regions