ACER (Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators) released the 44th REMIT Quarterly on Thursday 21 May, the first systematic Q1 review of REMIT 2.0 , and announced a joint ACER/EC workshop on 11 June titled "Advancing REMIT implementation and energy market surveillance" 1. On Wednesday 20 May ACER launched its Electricity Network Tariff Repository, the first EU tool for cross-border power tariff transparency, and the same day published an analysis of the summer 2024 Southeast Europe price spike, estimating that fully enforcing the 70% minimum cross-zonal capacity rule would have delivered EUR 580m of additional consumer welfare.
The compliance paradox stays unresolved. The REMIT 2.0 transaction-reporting guidance consultation closes on 12 June, one day after the workshop, leaving the operative posture for trading intermediaries through summer as operate-and-document. ACER has logged 204 STORs filed in 2025 against zero formal enforcement actions since the 29 April recast , and the first systematic Q1 review now sits in the public record. Hungary and Slovakia, named in ACER's 6 May TurkStream derogation opinions , face their 5 August EC ruling against this enforcement backdrop, with Kiskundorozsma-1 still awaiting Commission response inside the same window.
The European Commission convened the workshop alongside ACER as the formal compliance milestone; non-EU reporting intermediaries lose grandfather coverage from the 29 April recast and feed the surveillance uplift ACER demanded on 8 May. Against the enforcement noise, the Electricity Network Tariff Repository is the working operating-layer change: a cross-border power tariff transparency tool changes the interconnector spread economics from the bottom of the merit order up, and the EUR 580m welfare estimate gives the 70% rule a number to enforce against rather than a discretionary debate. For desks running interconnector spreads, that tool is the genuine operating-layer change; the REMIT enforcement posture stays a tail-risk read until first action lands.
