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Solar power in Cyprus
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Solar power in Cyprus benefits from over 3,300 hours of sunlight annually, giving it the highest potential in the European Union (EU).
![]() | This article needs to be updated. (January 2023) |

The 2023 IRENA Energy Profile for Cyprus highlights the increasing significance of solar energy in the country's renewable energy mix. In 2021, solar power generation amounted to 468 GWh, representing 9% of the total energy generated that year. Given that renewables constituted 15% of the total energy generated in 2021, equivalent to 775 GWh, solar energy's contribution is noteworthy within the renewable energy sector.[1]
In Cyprus, photovoltaic (PV) technology plays a significant role in the country's renewable energy initiatives. Through programs like net metering, self-consumption schemes, and net billing for industry, the country has facilitated the installation of over 17,000 PV systems, contributing to a total production exceeding 65 MW, as reported by the International Trade Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce.[2]
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Solar targets
Solar power in Cyprus benefits from abundant sunshine, over 3,300 hours annually, offering the highest photovoltaic potential in the European Union (EU).[3] By 2025, Cyprus has made rapid advances in both rooftop and utility-scale solar adoption, despite facing significant infrastructure and grid management challenges.[1][2]
Solar energy has become a cornerstone of Cyprus’s clean energy transition. According to the Ministry of Energy, Commerce, and Industry, Cyprus reached approximately 850 MW of installed solar photovoltaic (PV) capacity by mid-2025, a remarkable increase from 125 MW just a few years earlier.[4] Solar now accounts for an estimated 21% of total national electricity generation, helping meet ambitious EU-mandated climate targets.[5]
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Policy and Targets
Cyprus’s National Energy and Climate Plan aims for renewable sources to generate at least 40% of electricity by 2030, primarily through solar power.[4]An important policy detail: net metering for new residential and commercial PV installations has been temporarily extended until December 31, 2025, after which new applicants will be subject to a net billing scheme.[12] Existing net metering customers are unaffected until their contracts expire. Government incentives promote self-consumption and energy storage, and the rollout of smart meters is underway to over 400,000 homes and businesses.[4]
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Growth and Curtailment
Recent years have seen record PV expansion but also record grid curtailment. In the first half of 2025, over 181 GWh of solar electricity, more than half of all renewable output, was curtailed due to the island’s grid limitations and lack of large-scale storage.[1][2][6][7] The curtailment rate jumped from 13.4% in 2023, to 29% in 2024, and a staggering 58% by summer 2025,[1][2][6] highlighting the urgent need for grid upgrades and storage integration.[7]
PV statistics

Large-Scale Projects
Recent years have featured the development of commercial-scale PV parks, such as the Vassiliko Cement Works Photovoltaic Park (8 MW, operational since 2020),[9] as well as ongoing efforts to establish a 30-50 MW bicommunal solar power plant, overseen by the United Nations Development Programme and the EU.[4]
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Challenges and Future Outlook
Despite EU-leading solar irradiation, Cyprus’s isolated grid, without interconnection to the continental system, creates major balancing and storage issues.[11] Widespread curtailment, rapidly changing policy, and the need for significant investment in energy storage and grid flexibility remain pressing challenges.[1][2][7] The shift from net metering to net billing for new installations starting in 2026 adds complexity for households planning solar investments.[12][13] New battery initiatives, digital grid management, and the introduction of hybrid solar-storage business models are expected to define the sector's evolution toward 2030 and beyond.[4]
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See also
References
External links
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