Finland aims to become carbon neutral by 2035, putting it fourth in the world and ahead of every other country in Europe.
Nuclear is already a key part of its energy mix, but it is working hard to scale up wind and solar capacity.
It is also shifting away from using its extensive forestry resources for fuel, as this creates carbon emissions, and is instead using legislation to promote increased use of wood in the construction sector.
Finland’s carbon neutrality plan
>> click to zoom in
>> click to zoom in How will Finland get to carbon neutrality?
Finland’s key policies to achieve climate neutrality by 2035 include:
Having almost emissions-free electricity and heat production by the end of the 2030s
Having a “resource-wise” and low-emission transport system
Lowering the construction sector’s carbon footprint
Boosting the energy efficiency of current building stock and moving to zero-emission heating.
The path to emissions-free electricity will primarily be laid by wind power. Onshore wind will make up a large part of Finland’s growth in renewable electricity generation, and the country will also develop its first large-scale offshore farms, according to the IEA.
Finland’s wind power capacity grew by 75% in 2022 alone, the country’s wind power association says.
At the same time, solar power will go from being a minor contributor to the grid to playing a much bigger role. Solar took one of the biggest portions of Finnish public funding for energy investments in 2018-2021, at €37.5 million ($40.2m) – behind only transport and hydrogen, both on €40.2 million ($43m) – and the National Climate and Energy Strategy estimates capacity will jump to 5.3 gigawatts by 2030 from around 1 gigawatt in 2022.
>> click to zoom in Finland has more forest cover than any other country in Europe, at almost 75% of its total area. As a result, fuels derived from wood are key to its energy mix. These
create many climate-warming emissions when burned, which is why the government wants to shift heating and cooling systems towards the use of non-combustion technologies such as heat pumps, waste heat recovery and geothermal energy, the IEA notes.
Decarbonizing Finland’s transport sectorFinland has committed to a goal of having
only zero-emission passenger cars and vans on sale by 2035. It is making strong progress in adopting electric vehicles, the IEA says, but it also points out that it is behind Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Iceland in doing so.
>> click to zoom in However, there is a need to address freight transport. It makes up 42% of fuel consumption on Finland’s roads and its energy intensity rose between 2005 and 2020. In this area, the government sees hydrogen and hydrogen-based fuels as better decarbonization solutions than electrification.
Cutting construction sector and building emissionsFinland is also looking at measures to use more wood in construction, instead of carbon-intensive materials such as concrete, the IEA says. Using wood in construction has the added benefit of keeping carbon locked into the product, unlike using wood as a fuel, Mikkola tells forest-sector website Forest.fi.
Within buildings themselves, Finland is working to boost energy efficiency through measures such as consumer awareness campaigns and smart meters, which are now in place at nearly all of its 3.7 million metering points, the IEA says.
Demand-side changes will be as critical as supply-side transformation to achieve a successful energy transition, the
World Economic Forum’s Fostering Effective Energy Transition points out, saying they could drive more than 40% of the reduction in energy-related greenhouse gas emissions over the next 20 years.
“Finland is well placed to reach its [carbon neutrality] goals because of the hard work and investment it has already undertaken in nuclear plants and hydropower,” IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol says. “And the country is a frontrunner in several key energy technologies, such as batteries and heat pumps.”
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