
MRI has completed a comparative study, financed by the European Climate Fund, on the renovation subsidy schemes for residential buildings in Bulgaria, Greece, Hungary and Romania. All four countries have subsidy schemes for this purpose for decades, but they are still fundamentally different. The Bulgarian and Romanian scheme focuses on multi-apartment buildings, assuming that the residential communities are lacking both the financial capacities and the technical and organisational skills to implement the renovation, thus the subsidy schemes supports relatively limited number of communities, but these communities receive subsidies up to 100% besides strong technical assistance. The Greek system focuses on flats and the state provides financial subsidies for the renovation, the scale of which depends on the income of the families. Hungary was a pioneer of panel rehabilitation in the 2000s, the dynamics of which was broken due to the financial crisis and the focus of renovation was transferred to family houses. Currently the Home Renovation Programme for family houses struggles to find a balance between securing the proper quality of renovations and still requiring easy to follow administrative processes. The comparative study itself can be found here: