Abbreviation | CEER |
---|---|
Formation | 2000 |
Legal status | Not for profit organisation |
Purpose | Energy market regulation in Europe |
Location |
|
Region served
|
Europe |
Membership
|
33 national energy regulatory authorities |
Secretary General
|
Andrew Ebrill |
Main organ
|
General Assembly and Board of Directors (President - John Mogg, Baron Mogg) |
Affiliations | ACER, International Confederation of Energy Regulators |
Website | CEER |
The Council of European Energy Regulators (CEER) is a "not-for-profit" organisation in which Europe’s national regulators of electricity and gas voluntarily cooperate to protect consumer' interests and to facilitate the creation of a single, competitive and sustainable internal market for gas and electricity in Europe
In March 2000, ten national energy regulatory authorities voluntarily signed a "Memorandum of Understanding" for the establishment of the Council of European Energy Regulators (CEER). The CEER’s objective is to facilitate cooperation among Europe’s energy regulators in promoting a single-EU electricity and gas market. In 2003 the CEER was formally established as a "not-for-profit association" under Belgian law, with its own Brussels-based Secretariat. The CEER represents 33 members - the national energy regulators (from the EU-28 Member States, Iceland and Norway as CEER Members, and the regulators of Switzerland, Montenegro and the Republic of Macedonia as Observers)
The CEER works closely with the Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators (ACER). ACER is a European Community body with legal personality. ACER became fully operational on 3 March 2011. Its seat is in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
CEER seeks to facilitate the creation of a single, competitive, efficient and sustainable market for gas and electricity in Europe.
Some other objectives:
The CEER acts as a platform for cooperation, information exchange and assistance between national energy regulators and is their interface at European level with the EU Institutions.
The CEER establishes expert views for discussion with the European Commission (in particular DG TREN, DG Competition and DG Research) and seeks to provide the necessary elements for the development of regulation in the fields of electricity and gas.
The CEER also strives to share regulatory experience worldwide through its links with similar regional energy regulatory associations. CEER has taken the lead role in developing the International Energy Regulation Network (IERN) web platform to facilitate the global exchange and analysis of information concerning electricity and natural gas market regulation.