Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ

General Information

General Information

A Guarantee of Origin is a certificate proving that the corresponding energy was produced from renewable energy sources (RES), nuclear sources or by high-efficiency combined heat and power generation (HEC) and was either consumed on-site at the place of generation, injected to the electricity system or heat/cooling distribution networks.

The Guarantee of Origin entitles the energy supplier to declare the respective amount of energy delivered to the final consumer as electricity produced from renewable sources, nuclear sources, or HEC.

The purpose of Guarantees of Origin is to provide proof to the final consumer that a certain amount of energy was produced from RES, nuclear sources, or HEC. At the same time, they serve as a basis for calculating the electricity energy mix.

In Slovakia, market participants in the role of energy producers who do not receive support in the form of a Feed-In Tariff (FIT), Feed-In Premium (FIP) or investment support may apply for the issuance of Guarantees of Origin.

Producers and suppliers of electricity or heating/cooling.

A Guarantee of Origin is issued for an amount of energy corresponding to 1 MWh and is valid for 12 months from the production date of the corresponding energy. Within this period, it can be handled according to Act No. 251/2021 Coll., i.e. it can be traded, transferred between account holders, and cancelled for the end consumers.

According to Act No. 251/2012 Coll., the application of a Guarantee of Origin means it is a cancellation of the GO to prove the share of energy in the total amount of energy delivered to the end consumer.

Guarantees of Origin are issued exclusively in electronic form and are recorded in OKTE’s information systems or on the international AIB HUB platform.

OKTE, a.s. became a member of the Association of Issuing Bodies (AIB) on 27th September 2019 at the AIB General Assembly in Reykjavik. AIB brings together entities authorized to issue and manage Guarantees of Origin and enables international transfers of energy certificates through AIB HUB platform. AIB members include energy regulatory authorities, transmission system operators, and market operators designated by governments to issue Guarantees of Origin under EU directives on RES (2009/28/EC) and cogeneration (2012/27/EU).

The harmonized rules of the European Energy Certificate System (EECS) define the standard for the issuance, registration, transfer, and use of EECS certificates, as well as related processes. EECS rules require members to implement these standards into their national schemes as a condition of participation in the EECS. Currently, EECS enables trading between certification schemes in 30 European countries.

Information for Producers and Suppliers

Information for Producers and Suppliers

OKTE, a.s. charges an annual fixed fee of â‚¬120 excluding VAT for maintaining the account in the GO scheme. In addition, it charges a tariff of â‚¬0.005/MWh for the issuance or the transfer of Guarantees of Origin. The price list can be found here.

The ISZPE system is used to record Guarantees of Origin. It handles issuance, transfers between account holders, and cancellation to final consumers. Necessary data regarding individual production devices and the corresponding measured values are automatically transferred from the ISOM system (Information System for the Measurements ).

OKTE, a.s. issues Guarantees of Origin for electricity (ZPEe) and for heating or cooling (ZPEt). GOs can be obtained separately for electricity delivered to the grid (Supply), for delivered heat/cooling in the CHS (Central Heating Supply) system, or for electricity consumed on-site at the production device (Onsite consumption).

In accordance with EECS rules, GOs are issued only for whole megawatt-hours produced during the given period. Residual amounts are currently not considered.

No, since these are separate products that differ in several aspects, each type of Guarantee of Origin must be applied for separately.

GOs must always be requested in the month following the month of the respective energy production. The quantities available for GO issuance depend on receiving the necessary data from energy producers and distribution system operators, as well as for evaluating the support in the form of Feed-in tariff and Feed-in premium. Typically, we start issuing GOs between the 13th and 17th calendar day of the month, always for the production of the previous month.

OKTE, a.s. is bound by EECS certificate rules (Rule C3.4.4, paragraph a) which state that GOs can only be issued for periods during which the relevant production device was registered in the issuer’s information system (ISZPE).

GOs issued for energy delivered to the grid can be traded, i.e. transferred to other account holders, or cancelled for the end consumers. In the case of GOs issued for energy consumed on-site at the production device, they are automatically cancelled up on issuing.

OKTE, a.s. is not the competent authority to interpret Act No. 609/2007 Coll. on excise duty on electricity, coal, and natural gas. For proving the cancellation of GOs, OKTE, a.s. issues a Cancellation statement, which can be generated in OKTE’s information systems in PDF format in case of cancelled GOs.

GO auctions serve to sell electricity GOs issued for production devices supported by investment aid and production devices receiving operational support in the form of a Feed-In Tariff or Feed-In Premium under Act No. 309/2009 Coll. The GOs entering the auction are issued in three months after electricity production and final imbalance settlement. Only electricity GOs from RES will currently be included in the auction.

To participate in the GO auction, it is necessary to sign an annex to the ZPE – AIB agreement with OKTE, a.s. for participation in GO auctions.

OKTE, a.s. usually organizes GO auctions at three-month intervals, always offering GOs from the previous period. The auction is announced 14 days before it starts and takes place online in the ISZPE from 9:00 to 13:00. The trading is based on the pay-as-bid principle. Participants may submit simple (for specific types of sources) and variable (without source selection) bids.

Working with the XMtrade®/ZPE System

Working with the XMtrade®/ZPE System

The user guide for the XMtrade®/ZPE system can be found at this link, or by clicking on the “i” symbol within the system.

The access to the information systems of OKTE, a.s. is based on the Single Sign-On principle. Login credentials are valid across platforms (excluding EDC) and you can smoothly switch between them using the nine-square icon in the top-left corner of the system menu.

A login name (typically created in the format “entity_surname”) and a password (automatically generated by the system). Authentication can be done via SMS or a digital security certificate (mandatory for the producers that operate photovoltaic sources with installed capacity above 100 kW and for other types of production sources above 1 MW). The suppliers get access to the ISZPE via the digital security certificate.

Yes, producers are required to register each production device within the XMtrade®/ZPE system. All the necessary data is automatically uploaded from the ISOM system, so registration takes only a few minutes. The registration is valid for 5 years.

This date does not refer to the commissioning of the production device or the issuance of related documents by RONI (ĂšRSO); it is only the date of registration within the GO scheme in the ISZPE. You should enter the current month. Production devices are usually registered as of the 1st day of the month so that producers can request GOs for the entire month within their first registration.

During the issuance process, measured data is automatically transferred from the ISOM system. You must select the commodity (Electricity  or Heat), then the specific production device, whether it is a “Source” or “Technology” (technology applies to HEC), and the production month (the previous month is filled in automatically). You must also choose whether the GOs are for electricity injected to the grid (Supply) or consumed onsite (Own consumption). The producer must enter the amount of GOs being requested. It is standard to request the maximum available amount.

GOs issued for â€śOwn consumption” are automatically applied and therefore marked as â€śCancelled,” meaning they cannot be traded or otherwise handled. GOs issued for â€śSupply” remain “Active.” Individual GOs can be found in their relevant menus under the Guarantees of Origin section.

In the “Active Guarantees of Origin” tab, select the GOs you wish to transfer, then click the narrow arrow in the “Operations” column labelled “Transfer certificate,” fill in the account holder – recipient – and the amount selected for that specific transfer. GOs can be split into individual megawatt-hours.

In the “Active certificates account” tab and “Operations” column, click on the round icon with an arrow labelled “Cancel certificate” and choose whether the consumer is existing or new. For an existing consumer, you can select them from the list or upload them via an .xlsx file containing the appropriate EIC codes (used mainly for groups of consumers). For a new consumer, you must enter the consumer type (Individual, Legal Entity, Group of Consumers, Production device) along with identification details. You also need to specify the period to which the given GOs are being cancelled.

The confirmation must first be generated in the “Business records” section under the “Consumers” menu. After selecting a specific consumer, click “View record” in the “Operations” column, navigate to the “Cancelled certificates” tab, and select the specific GOs (symbols ! or âś“ indicate whether a Cancellation statement has already been generated). After selecting the GOs, the “Generate cancellation statement” button will be activated. The confirmation will then be saved under the “Cancellation statements” tab, where it can be downloaded in a bilingual (Slovak/English) PDF format.

First, check the date when the request was submitted. Since the issuance of GOs is tied to the evaluation of support, data typically becomes available in the second half of the month after data has been transferred between systems. It is also important to verify the accuracy of measured data and the date it was entered into the ISOM system. If the entry occurred later than the deadlines specified in the Market Rules, the data may not have been transferred. The registration date of the production device in the GO system is also critical. According to the EECS rules (Rule C3.4.4, paragraph a), OKTE, a.s. can only issue Guarantees of Origin for the period during which the production device was registered in the issuer’s database. If none of these reasons apply to the zero values, please contact us at zpe@okte.sk.

Explanation of Abbreviations

Explanation of Abbreviations

AIB: Association of Issuing Bodies

AIB HUB: International digital platform for the transfer of Guarantees of Origin

CHS: Centralized Heat Supply

EDC: Energy Data Center

EECS: European Energy Certificate System

FIT: Feed-In Tariff

FIP: Feed-In Premium

HEC: High-Efficiency Combined Heat and Power Generation

NON-AIB: National Guarantees of Origin not issued under the EECS scheme

RES: Renewable Energy Sources

ZPEe: Guarantees of Origin for Electricity

ZPEt: Guarantees of Origin for Heating/Cooling