6 minute read | April.16.2026
Germany’s Energy Efficiency Act (“EnEfG”) is set for a major regulatory reset which seeks to recalibrate the existing regime by raising the thresholds for the mandatory implementation of energy management systems, easing binding savings and reporting requirements (i.e. fewer formalities), while introducing more structured audit and reporting requirements.
On 9 April 2026, the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy published a draft bill to amend the EnEfG and several related instruments. The draft is expressly framed as a fast-track measure to complete outstanding implementation requirements under the EU Energy Efficiency Directive (EU) 2023/1791 (“EED”), following the missed EED implementation deadline of 10 October 2025, which prompted the EU Commission to initiate infringement proceedings against Germany, among 25 other EU member states.
The EnEfG has been the central piece of legislation for increasing energy efficiency in Germany since November 2023 and is the core German statute implementing parts of the EED. It obliges the public sector, companies with high energy consumption, and operators of data centers to systematically reduce their energy consumption, avoid energy losses, and make greater use of efficiency potential.
The EnEfG sets energy-saving goals to support security of supply, economic efficiency, and climate protection. While the draft amendment keeps the long-term primary and final energy reduction targets, it loosens enforcement by removing binding savings obligations for Federal and State governments and shifting focus from national targets to broader climate and competitiveness objectives.
The draft bill primarily aims at aligning German energy efficiency law more closely with EU minimum requirements, and rests on three pillars:
The ‘Energy Efficiency First’ principle is a core concept in the EU’s energy policy, which can be described as a holistic and cross-sectoral approach to improving the overall efficiency of the integrated energy system. Decision-makers are required to prioritize solutions that take into account security of supply and cost-efficiency, and to support the most efficient pathways to climate neutrality. In practice, this essentially means that energy savings must be seriously taken into consideration in major investment decisions with a view to whether reducing energy demand would be more cost-effective and sustainable than investing in new energy supply infrastructure, such as power plants or grid expansion measures. By contrast, the current EnEfG is rather framed around quantitative energy-efficiency targets and annual savings obligations.
The draft aims to operationalizing this principle through mandatory ex-ante assessments for the public sector and private legal entities involved in important decisions related to the energy sector or having an impact on energy consumption or energy efficiency. Stakeholders must evaluate energy-efficiency solutions, including demand-side resources and system flexibility before making any planning decisions or major investment decisions with a value in excess of EUR 100 million, or in excess of EUR 175 million for decisions relating to transport infrastructure projects.
Where such decisions require a permit under public law, the draft bill places a duty on the competent permitting authorities to ensure compliance with the assessment obligations.
The draft redefines the triggering thresholds and resets the clock for the mandatory implementation of (i) energy or environmental management systems and (ii) implementation plans.
The draft amendment keeps the EnEfG’s dedicated data center chapter but adjusts the compliance metrics, makes the reporting framework more workable for modern multi‑tenant/co‑location models, and tightens up confidentiality and cooperation mechanics.
Overall, for data center operators and IT owners, the draft bill appears to improve practicality through less strict PUE requirements, clearer confidentiality rules, and reporting obligations that are more dependent on reliable data supply from third parties.
The draft bill cuts red tape in several areas:
The proposed amendments are expected to affect compliance and contracting practices across energy‑intensive operations, large portfolios, data center ecosystems, and public-sector-facing supply chains.
For energy utilities and industrial energy users, the most immediate effect is the reshaping of the corporate compliance “buckets”. Raising the management-system threshold to 23.6 GWh will certainly remove a significant number of companies from the EnEfG’s most stringent compliance tier, but audit duties and post-audit implementation requirements will remain central and may become more closely scrutinized.
For global corporates with significant energy needs and for investors in the renewables and infrastructure sector, the draft will likely increase the importance of contractual allocation of risks and responsibilities in connection with energy audits, implementation planning and project documentation, including confidentiality management and data availability.
For real estate owners and facility managers, the public-sector reporting framework is likely to translate into tighter data-delivery expectations in leases and facility management arrangements where public bodies are involved.
The draft bill is currently at ministerial draft stage and details may still change materially during consultation and inter-ministerial coordination prior to enactment. In light of the EED transposition deadline having already passed the legislator is arguing for a rapid implementation.
The issues likely to attract the most attention in practice include (i) mapping average consumption against the proposed thresholds, (ii) audit scope and documentation (given the closer link to implementation planning), and (iii) data flows and confidentiality, particularly for data centers and public-sector real estate use.