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permits for solar and wind France 2026

How to Secure Permits and Grid Connections for Solar and Wind Projects in France, PPE3 & RED 2026 Practical Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

France’s renewable energy landscape shifted decisively in early 2026 with the publication of PPE3 (the third Programmation Pluriannuelle de l’Énergie), the government’s announcement of a 12 GW tender package, and the EU deadline requiring Member States to designate renewables acceleration areas under the revised Renewable Energy Directive. For developers, IPPs, investors and in-house counsel navigating permits for solar and wind France 2026, these changes rewrite the rules on permitting pathways, grid-connection sequencing and tender eligibility. This practical guide consolidates the legal steps, timelines and checklists needed to progress projects under the new framework, and flags the risks that catch teams off-guard.

Five immediate actions for developers:

  1. Confirm whether your project site falls within a designated renewables acceleration area, this determines which streamlined permitting track applies.
  2. Submit or update your grid-connection request to RTE or Enedis without delay; queue management timelines have tightened.
  3. Revise your environmental impact assessment (ESIA) scope to reflect the new provisions published in the Official Journal on 22 April 2026.
  4. Review tender eligibility criteria, including Made-in-Europe content scoring, cybersecurity requirements and ECS carbon-footprint thresholds, before bid submission.
  5. For installations above 10 MW, prepare technical capability for mandatory participation in the national balancing mechanism (mFRR) from 2026 onward.

PPE3 France 2026: what changed for permitting, tenders and grid planning

Published in February 2026 following public consultation, PPE3 sets France’s energy strategy through 2035. It aims to increase decarbonised electricity production to between 650 and 693 TWh by 2035, compared with 458 TWh in 2023, while reducing fossil-fuel consumption to roughly 330 TWh in 2035 from 900 TWh in 2023. For solar and wind developers, the programme translates into concrete capacity targets, auction calendars and administrative reforms that directly affect project feasibility.

PPE3 targets and auctions

PPE3 establishes a solar PV target of 48 GW by 2030, with the government planning to auction approximately 2.9 GW of solar PV annually starting from 2026. The programme also confirms that offshore wind projects launched since 2010 will gradually enter the production fleet, representing 3.6 GW by 2030, with 1.5 GW already in service. On 2 April 2026, France announced tenders for seven offshore wind projects totalling 10 GW (combining the AO9 and AO10 rounds into a single procedure), alongside smaller solar and onshore wind auctions, bringing the total package to roughly 12 GW. The auction framework now explicitly favours bids using a higher share of European-manufactured components, reflecting a “Made in Europe” industrial policy.

Decrees and administrative changes

Two regulatory instruments are essential reading for permitting teams. First, Decree No. 2026-302, adopted on 21 April 2026, introduces a fast-track environmental litigation regime for strategic projects, compressing appeal windows and imposing stricter procedural discipline on administrative courts. Second, a separate decree published in the Official Journal on 22 April 2026 streamlines renewables environmental permitting by simplifying documentation requirements and reducing processing times for projects that meet defined criteria. Together, these decrees signal the government’s intent to reduce the average permitting cycle that has historically slowed French deployment relative to European peers.

Industry observers expect these changes to shave several months off the administrative timeline for well-prepared applications, although the practical effect will depend on how préfectures implement the new provisions at departmental level.

Renewable Energy Directive 2026 and renewables acceleration areas, procedure and advantages

At the EU level, the revised Renewable Energy Directive requires Member States to designate, by February 2026, renewables acceleration areas for at least one type of renewable energy technology, with particularly streamlined permit-granting procedures for projects deployed in those areas. This obligation creates a two-track permitting system: projects inside designated areas benefit from shorter decision deadlines and reduced environmental documentation burdens, while those outside follow the standard (and slower) route.

How acceleration areas change local permitting in France

Within a designated renewables acceleration area, the likely practical effects include:

  • Binding time limits. Competent authorities must issue decisions within defined timeframes; failure to respond can trigger tacit approval mechanisms.
  • Simplified environmental screening. Projects may benefit from lighter environmental impact procedures, particularly where strategic environmental assessments have already been conducted at the area-designation stage.
  • Reduced scope for third-party challenges. The legal basis for opposing projects on environmental grounds narrows where the area has already been assessed and designated through a public participation process.

France’s transposition approach is still crystallising, but the February 2026 deadline has already passed, and early indications suggest that designated zones will align closely with existing zones d’accélération identified by communes under national law. Developers should confirm their site’s status directly with the relevant préfecture or through the Ministry of Ecological Transition’s mapping tools.

Practical test: is your site inside a designated area?

To determine whether a project benefits from acceleration-area status, developers should:

  1. Check the official list of designated areas published by the préfet of the relevant département.
  2. Cross-reference the site coordinates against the national mapping portal maintained by the Ministry of Ecological Transition.
  3. Request written confirmation from the préfecture, this document will be required as part of any tender submission or permit application referencing the streamlined track.

Permits for solar and wind France 2026: permitting pathway for solar projects

Solar permitting France follows a layered regime that varies by project size, ground conditions and grid-connection voltage. The core authorisations sit across urbanism law, the ICPE environmental regime and sector-specific energy regulations.

Which permits apply by project size

Project size / type Typical authorisations required Key timing trigger
Rooftop ≤ 250 kWp Déclaration préalable (DP); grid connection request to Enedis DP processing: typically 1–2 months
Ground-mounted 250 kWp – 1 MW Permis de construire (PC); environmental screening (case-by-case EIA); grid connection request PC instruction: 3–4 months; EIA screening adds 2–3 months if triggered
Ground-mounted 1 MW – 50 MW PC; systematic EIA/ESIA; ICPE declaration or authorisation (depending on site sensitivity); public enquiry; grid connection request to Enedis or RTE Full EIA cycle: 6–12 months; public enquiry: 1–2 months; ICPE authorisation: 6–10 months
Ground-mounted > 50 MW All of the above plus potential ministerial involvement; possible Natura 2000 appropriate assessment; enhanced public participation Overall cycle: 18–36 months from initiation to final permit

Environmental studies and mitigation (EIA, Natura 2000 screening)

Ground-mounted solar projects above 1 MW systematically require a full environmental impact assessment. The ESIA must address biodiversity impacts (flora, fauna, avifauna, chiroptera), landscape effects, soil and water management, and cumulative impacts with other nearby installations. Where the site lies within or adjacent to a Natura 2000 zone, an appropriate assessment under the Habitats Directive is mandatory, this evaluates whether the project would adversely affect the site’s conservation objectives. Mitigation measures (avoidance, reduction, compensation, the “ERC” sequence under French law) must be detailed in the permit application. The new decree published on 22 April 2026 streamlines certain documentation requirements for projects inside renewables acceleration areas, but the core EIA obligations remain for sites of ecological sensitivity.

Administrative appeals and fast-track litigation risk

Decree No. 2026-302 introduces a compressed litigation track for permits attached to strategic energy projects. Under the standard administrative appeal regime, third parties have two months from public display of the permit to lodge a recours gracieux or recours contentieux before the administrative tribunal. The new fast-track regime shortens procedural timeframes for court proceedings and imposes stricter standing requirements for applicants. Developers should factor in the residual litigation risk when setting financial close timelines, even accelerated proceedings take several months, and an interim suspension order (référé-suspension) can halt construction pending resolution.

Permits for solar and wind France 2026: wind farm authorisation pathway

Wind farm authorisation France follows the autorisation environnementale unique (AEU) framework, which consolidates what were previously separate ICPE, urbanism and environmental permits into a single integrated procedure administered by the préfet.

Wind-specific studies: sound, radar and visual impact

Wind projects carry additional study requirements beyond the standard EIA:

  • Acoustic study. French regulations impose strict noise thresholds at the nearest habitations, typically an emergence limit of 5 dB(A) during the day and 3 dB(A) at night above ambient levels. A predictive noise model must be submitted with the application, and post-construction monitoring is usually conditioned in the permit.
  • Aviation and radar interference. Civil and military aviation authorities (DGAC and the Ministry of Defence) must be consulted. Proximity to radar installations or flight paths can trigger refusals or turbine-height restrictions. Early engagement with these bodies is critical, response times are long and non-negotiable.
  • Visual and landscape impact. A photomontage-based landscape study assessing visibility from heritage sites, residential areas and protected landscapes is required. In practice, visual impact is the most frequent ground for prefectoral refusal.

Land and lease preconditions for tender eligibility

Developers submitting bids in renewable tenders France must demonstrate secure land rights at the application stage. This means having signed long-term leases (typically 20–30 years) with landowners, with lease terms aligned to tender obligations. Lease agreements should include clauses covering grid delay risk, extension options matching the support contract duration, and landowner cooperation obligations for permit and environmental study access. Inadequate land documentation is a common ground for tender disqualification.

Permit / authorisation Competent authority Typical timeline
Autorisation environnementale unique (AEU) Préfet (DREAL instruction) 12–18 months
Aviation / radar clearance DGAC / Ministry of Defence 3–6 months (parallel)
Natura 2000 appropriate assessment Préfet (on DREAL advice) Integrated into AEU cycle
Archaeological diagnostic DRAC / INRAP 2–6 months (if triggered)
Grid connection agreement RTE or Enedis See grid connection section below

Grid connection France 2026: process and realistic timelines

Securing a grid connection France 2026 remains one of the longest lead-time items in any renewable project. The process depends on whether the project connects to the transmission network (RTE, for installations typically above 12 MW or at voltages ≥ 63 kV) or the distribution network (Enedis or a local distribution system operator).

Who to contact and standard procedure

The connection process follows a standard sequence regardless of the operator:

  1. Initial enquiry and pre-application. The developer submits a connection request specifying installed capacity, technology, location and desired commissioning date.
  2. Feasibility study. The grid operator assesses available capacity, identifies necessary reinforcement works and issues a technical and financial proposal.
  3. Connection offer (proposition technique et financière). A binding offer detailing scope of works, cost allocation and timeline. The developer typically has three months to accept.
  4. Connection works agreement and construction. Once accepted, the operator and developer sign a convention and works proceed. The developer bears the cost of the dedicated connection infrastructure; upstream reinforcement costs are socialised or shared depending on the regulatory framework.
  5. Commissioning and energisation. Final inspections, metering installation and grid compliance testing precede commercial operation.

RTE SDDR and implications for connection capacity

RTE’s Strategic Development Plan for the French Transmission Grid (SDDR) identifies reinforcement priorities through 2030 and beyond. The plan highlights that major investment is needed primarily in industrial port areas and in central France to accommodate rising renewable generation capacity. For developers, the SDDR signals where grid capacity is most constrained, and therefore where connection timelines will be longest. Under the proposed EU Permitting Directive (part of the Grids Package), all transmission system operators would be required to submit a ten-year network development plan, further formalising this planning obligation.

Typical grid connection timeline

Stage Optimistic Realistic Pessimistic (congested zone)
Initial enquiry to feasibility study 2 months 4–6 months 8–12 months
Feasibility study to connection offer 3 months 6–9 months 12–18 months
Offer acceptance to works completion 6 months 12–18 months 24–36 months
Commissioning and testing 1 month 2–3 months 3–6 months
Total 12 months 24–36 months 48–72 months

A critical 2026 change: all power generation plants above 10 MW, including wind and solar, must now participate in the national balancing mechanism (mFRR). This obligation, effective from 2026, requires developers to ensure their installations are technically capable of responding to balancing activation signals, which may necessitate additional control systems and communication infrastructure.

Tender compliance and contract/risk checklist for 2026 auctions

France’s 2026 auction programme introduces evaluation criteria that go beyond price. Bid managers must now address Made-in-Europe content preferences, cybersecurity standards and environmental sustainability metrics alongside the traditional technical and financial criteria. Understanding these requirements early is essential to assembling a competitive, compliant bid for renewable tenders France.

Bid document checklist

Every tender submission should include:

  • Valid permits or proof of pending application. A granted autorisation environnementale or PC, or evidence that the application is registered and under instruction.
  • Grid connection status. A connection offer or, at minimum, a registered connection request with acknowledgement from the grid operator.
  • Environmental clearance documentation. The completed EIA, any Natura 2000 screening opinions, and evidence of mitigation measures.
  • Land rights evidence. Signed lease agreements or land titles covering the project footprint and access routes.
  • ECS carbon-footprint certificate. For solar PV panels, certification that the carbon footprint is ≤ 550 kg CO₂eq/kWp (as required for PPE2/PPE3 tender eligibility).
  • European content declaration. Documentation evidencing the share of European-manufactured components used in the project.
  • Cybersecurity compliance statement. Where applicable, evidence that SCADA and communication systems meet the required cybersecurity standards.

Risk allocation recommendations for developers

Tender criterion What it proves How to evidence it
Price competitiveness Economic viability and value for public support Financial model with sensitivity analysis; bankable term sheet
European content share Industrial policy compliance Supply chain declarations; manufacturer certificates of origin
Carbon footprint (ECS) Environmental sustainability of supply chain ECS certificate ≤ 550 kg CO₂eq/kWp
Grid readiness Deliverability within tender timeline Connection offer or registered request with operator acknowledgement
Cybersecurity Resilience of digital infrastructure Compliance audit report; manufacturer cybersecurity certifications

Developers should negotiate grid-delay clauses in their EPC contracts and ensure force majeure definitions cover regulatory or administrative permitting delays. Milestone-gating provisions, tying financial commitments to permit and grid milestones, protect against capital at risk in the event of unforeseen procedural delays.

Permitting timeline checklist and risk matrix

The following 24-month indicative checklist outlines the critical path for a typical ground-mounted solar or onshore wind project proceeding under PPE3 France 2026 rules. Timelines assume a project inside a designated renewables acceleration area; add 6–12 months for sites outside such areas.

Months 1–6: Site selection and preliminary studies; land lease negotiation and execution; initial grid-connection enquiry; engagement with préfecture on acceleration-area status; launch of environmental baseline surveys (12-month ecological cycle begins).

Months 6–12: EIA/ESIA completion; permit application submission (AEU for wind or PC/ICPE for solar); grid feasibility study receipt; public enquiry preparation; aviation/radar consultation (wind projects).

Months 12–18: Public enquiry; préfet decision on permit; grid connection offer receipt and acceptance; tender bid preparation and submission.

Months 18–24: Tender award; financial close; EPC mobilisation; grid connection works commencement; post-permit compliance and monitoring initiation.

Risk matrix, top eight project risks

Risk Probability Impact Mitigation
Grid connection delay High High Early application; parallel feasibility engagement; contractual delay clauses
Permit refusal Medium High Pre-application consultation; acceleration-area siting; thorough EIA
Third-party appeal Medium High Robust public participation; Decree No. 2026-302 fast-track route
NIMBY litigation / opposition Medium Medium Community benefit-sharing; landscape mitigation; early stakeholder engagement
Protected species finding Medium High Full-year ecological survey; avoidance-first site design; derogation application
Archaeological discovery Low Medium Preliminary diagnostic; budget contingency; DRAC early consultation
Land title dispute Low High Full title search; notarial verification; lease warranties
Grid reinforcement cost overrun Medium Medium Early feasibility study; negotiate cost cap in connection agreement

Pre-2026 vs. post-PPE3 and RED 2026: what changed, comparison table

The following table summarises the most material shifts affecting permits for solar and wind France 2026 against prior practice.

Obligation / topic Pre-2026 practice Post-PPE3 & RED 2026 (what changed)
Permit time limits Variable local practice; lengthy public enquiry phases with no binding decision deadline New EU time limits for binding opinions in acceleration areas; tacit approval mechanism where deadlines are missed
Renewables acceleration areas No formal concept; zones d’accélération introduced by Loi APER but not operationalised Mandatory designation by February 2026; projects inside areas benefit from streamlined environmental and permitting procedures
Environmental litigation Standard two-month appeal period; lengthy administrative court proceedings (12–24 months) Decree No. 2026-302 introduces fast-track regime for strategic energy projects with compressed court timelines
mFRR / balancing participation Voluntary for most renewables; no mandatory balancing obligation below large thermal thresholds All generation plants > 10 MW must participate in the national balancing mechanism from 2026
Annual tender volumes (solar) Approximately 2–2.5 GW annually under PPE2 auctions PPE3 plans ~2.9 GW of solar PV annually; 12 GW total package announced April 2026 (including offshore wind)
Tender eligibility criteria Price-dominant scoring with some environmental criteria Explicit Made-in-Europe content scoring; cybersecurity criterion; ECS carbon-footprint threshold (≤ 550 kg CO₂eq/kWp for solar)
Environmental permitting documentation Full ESIA required regardless of location for ground-mounted > 1 MW New decree (22 April 2026) streamlines documentation for projects in acceleration areas; core EIA obligations remain for sensitive sites
Grid planning obligations RTE SDDR published as planning guidance; no binding EU-level requirement for ten-year plans Proposed EU Permitting Directive requires TSOs to submit ten-year network development plans; RTE SDDR identifies reinforcement priorities to 2030

Conclusion and next steps for developers

The convergence of PPE3, the Renewable Energy Directive 2026 and the new French decrees creates both opportunity and urgency. Developers who act now, securing acceleration-area status, initiating grid requests, updating environmental studies and assembling compliant tender bids, will be best positioned to capture capacity in France’s expanding auction pipeline. Those who delay risk falling behind in an increasingly competitive and procedurally demanding environment. Permits for solar and wind France 2026 require earlier preparation, tighter coordination between legal, technical and commercial teams, and close attention to the new eligibility criteria that distinguish winning bids from disqualified ones. Timely engagement with specialist energy counsel is essential to navigate this evolving framework and protect project economics from permitting and grid-connection risk.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Cendrine Delivré at Franklin, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. French PPE3 official PDF (government consultation)
  2. European Commission, Enabling framework for renewables
  3. RTE, Strategic development plan for the French transmission grid (SDDR)
  4. Reuters, France launches 12 GW of renewable tenders
  5. pv magazine, France streamlines renewables environmental permitting
  6. Dentons, European Grids Package briefing
  7. Opoura, mFRR requirement in France from 2026

FAQs

What are the key PPE3 changes that affect renewables permitting in 2026?
PPE3 sets a solar PV target of 48 GW by 2030 and plans approximately 2.9 GW of annual solar auctions. It is accompanied by Decree No. 2026-302, which introduces fast-track environmental litigation for strategic projects, and a separate April 2026 decree streamlining environmental permitting documentation. Together, these instruments shorten approval timelines for well-prepared applications.
The revised Renewable Energy Directive required EU Member States to designate renewables acceleration areas by February 2026. Projects inside these areas benefit from binding decision timeframes, simplified environmental screening and, potentially, tacit approval if authorities miss their deadlines. Developers should verify their site’s designation status with the relevant préfecture.
Realistic timelines range from 24 to 36 months for a standard transmission- or distribution-connected project. In congested grid zones, the process can extend to 48–72 months. Early submission of the connection request, ideally concurrent with permit application, is critical to managing this timeline.
Yes. From 2026, all power generation plants above 10 MW, including wind and solar installations, must participate in the national balancing mechanism (mFRR). This requires appropriate control and communication systems capable of responding to balancing activation orders.
At minimum: valid permits (or pending application evidence), grid-connection offer or registered request, completed EIA and Natura 2000 screening, executed land leases, ECS carbon-footprint certificate for solar panels (≤ 550 kg CO₂eq/kWp), European content declaration, and a cybersecurity compliance statement where applicable.
A developer may lodge a recours gracieux (administrative review by the issuing authority) or a recours contentieux (before the administrative tribunal) within two months of the refusal decision. Under the fast-track regime introduced by Decree No. 2026-302, court proceedings for strategic energy projects are subject to compressed timelines. Interim measures (référé-suspension) remain available but courts apply strict urgency and serious-doubt criteria.
The developer bears the cost of dedicated connection infrastructure (the line from the installation to the point of connection). Upstream reinforcement costs, works needed on the existing network to accommodate the new generation, are generally socialised through network tariffs or shared according to rules defined by the Energy Regulatory Commission (CRE). The precise allocation is detailed in the connection offer issued by the grid operator.

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How to Secure Permits and Grid Connections for Solar and Wind Projects in France, PPE3 & RED 2026 Practical Guide

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