The European Union on Wednesday took a step closer to a final approval of energy-efficient buildings.
The European Parliament’s Committee on Industry, Research and Energy 
(ITRE) called for long-term renovation strategies for investment 
certainty and increased energy performance of buildings, basic 
infrastructure for electric cars in the buildings and a new indicator to
 measure the capacity of buildings to improve its operation and 
interaction with the grid.
The approval of the informal agreement between the Parliament and the
 Council in the committee on energy opens the way for the final plenary 
vote in April, the European Parliament said in a press release.
With the provisional agreement from December 19, 2017, on the updated
 directive for Energy Performance of Buildings, this file was the first 
to reach its conclusion out of the eight legislative proposals of the 
Clean Energy for All Europeans package launched in November 2016.
The provisional agreement was endorsed by Council in Coreper on January 31.
If approved by the full House in the April plenary session and 
subsequently by the Council, the updated Energy Performance of Buildings
 Directive will be published in the EU Official Journal and will enter 
into force 20 days after publication. Member States will have 20 months 
to transpose the new elements of the Directive into national law.
The building sector in the EU is the largest single energy consumer 
in Europe, absorbing 40% of final energy, with about 75% of 
buildings being energy inefficient. Likewise, and depending on the 
Member State, only 0.4-1.2% of the stock is renovated each year.
This opens the vast potential for energy efficiency gains in Europe 
as well as economic opportunities: the construction industry generates 
about 9% of European GDP and accounts for 18 million direct jobs.
https://www.neweurope.eu/article/eu-takes-step-closer-energy-efficient-buildings/