Source European GOs
Check market fit, define origin and production requirements, and ask suppliers to respond against the same certificate scope.
Create a structured RFQEECS guide
GreenPowerHub helps market participants work with EECS and European GO activity by reviewing market context, structuring RFQs, surfacing supply, managing counterparties, and moving opportunities into trade workflow.
60+ countries supported across certificate markets.
Choose your workflow
The right next step depends on whether you are sourcing certificates, bringing supply to market, or trading European GO opportunities.
Check market fit, define origin and production requirements, and ask suppliers to respond against the same certificate scope.
Create a structured RFQMake relevant supply discoverable while keeping counterparties, price context, and next steps in one controlled workflow.
Explore marketplace workflowsReview posted interest, price context, partner status, and trade workflow next steps before moving an opportunity forward.
Explore trade workflowPublic GreenPowerHub metrics
Used by buyers, sellers, traders, utilities, and service providers across renewable certificate markets.
For buyers
Buyer teams evaluating EECS and European Guarantees of Origin need more than a country name. They need to align market fit with origin, production period, technology, volume, delivery route, reporting expectations, and supplier responses they can compare.
Use GreenPowerHub to turn a European certificate requirement into a structured RFQ, so suppliers respond against the same scope instead of scattered spreadsheet assumptions.
For sellers
Producers, utilities, project owners, and certificate holders need a practical way to make supply visible without losing control of who they engage, what context is shared, and how a possible transaction moves forward.
GreenPowerHub helps sellers present supply in a market workflow where qualified participants can review opportunities and continue toward structured next steps.
For traders
Trading teams need market context, posted interest, counterparty context, partner status, and a practical route from opportunity to confirmation and documentation.
Use GreenPowerHub to review visible interest, compare price context, manage partner checks, and move accepted opportunities into a trade workflow.
Connected workflow
GreenPowerHub connects European GO market context, RFQs, posted interest, partner controls, and trade workflow steps so teams can move from a market question to a controlled next action.
Start with the country, regional origin, or European GO need.
Clarify production period, technology, support status, volume, and delivery requirements.
Compare supplier responses or evaluate posted buy and sell intent.
Keep partner status, contract context, and next actions visible.
Carry confirmation, signing, and documentation context forward.
Coverage and market fit
EECS and European GO work can involve individual countries, regional origin groupings, and AIB Hub context. Use the coverage lookup for the current GreenPowerHub market view instead of relying on a static country list.
EECS basics
EECS is the European Energy Certificate System operated by the Association of Issuing Bodies. It provides a harmonised framework for energy certificates, including the European Guarantees of Origin that many market participants use for renewable electricity disclosure and sourcing workflows.
A Guarantee of Origin is an electronic certificate that carries information about a unit of energy, such as issuer, country, production period, energy source, technology, plant details, capacity, and whether the certificate has been cancelled or expired.
AIB membership, scheme membership, and AIB Hub connection are not the same thing. For practical sourcing or trading decisions, check the market, certificate attributes, registry context, and intended claim before moving forward.
FAQ
EECS is the European certificate framework operated by AIB. Guarantees of Origin are the main certificate product transferred between AIB members.
European GOs can be part of renewable electricity sourcing, but the right reporting treatment depends on the applicable guidance, market boundary, certificate details, and intended claim.
Prices can vary by origin, production year, technology, volume, support status, label requirements, delivery route, and market conditions.
Include country or regional origin, production period, technology, volume, timing, cancellation needs, documentation expectations, and any additional labels or restrictions.
Use the GreenPowerHub certificate market lookup for the current public coverage view before planning an RFQ or trade workflow.
Yes. Sellers can list relevant European GO supply in GreenPowerHub when the product and account setup support that market, then use marketplace and partner workflows to manage who they engage with and how the opportunity moves forward.
No. GreenPowerHub is a marketplace. Buyers, sellers, and traders set their own prices for bids, offers, and negotiated trades. GreenPowerHub helps participants see market context and manage the workflow, but pricing decisions stay with the market participants.
Partner controls help teams manage which counterparties they engage with before a market conversation moves toward a transaction.
Yes. National authorities can set rules for who can trade, expiry, cancellation, registry access, and local practice. Check the relevant market context before acting.
Regional origins can help market participants express a broader sourcing or trading view, but the right fit depends on the buyer need, intended claim, and product requirements.
Posted interest is visible buy or sell intent with product details such as origin, year, technology, volume, and price context.
Closing prices can help trading teams compare market context over time where data is available, alongside visible interest and counterparty context.
Accepted opportunities can move into trade workflow for confirmation, signing, documentation, and next-step tracking.
Cancellation is the step where a certificate is used and made non-transferable, usually for disclosure or a renewable electricity claim.
Expiry is the end of a certificate's valid active period. The exact treatment can depend on the relevant national or registry rules.
The residual mix represents electricity supply not covered by Guarantees of Origin or other reliable tracking mechanisms and helps reduce double counting.
No. AIB membership, EECS scheme membership, and Hub connection are separate steps. Check current market status before making a cross-border assumption.
Official references
Next step
Choose the path that matches the work in front of you: sourcing, supply, trading, or European certificate coverage discovery.