Bulgaria: Kozloduy nuclear power...

Unit 6 of Bulgaria’s only nuclear power plant, Kozloduy, continues to experience issues...

Greece achieves record electricity...

Greece recorded a historic electricity export performance in the first half of 2025,...

Bulgaria threatens to withdraw...

State-owned Bulgarian Energy Holding (BEH) has expressed concerns about the Black Sea submarine...

Bosnia and Herzegovina: FBiH...

The Government of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (FBiH) has approved a...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeNews Serbia EnergySerbia: TPP Kolubara...

Serbia: TPP Kolubara B spatial plan public debate postponed

Due to a spread of COVID-19 in Serbia, the Government decided to postpone the public debate on the draft spatial plan for the project for the construction of thermal power plant Kolubara B and the event has been rescheduled to an undisclosed date.

In March, state-owned power utility EPS signed a preliminary agreement on cooperation with Chinese company PowerChina on the construction of coal-fired thermal power plant Kolubara B. The preliminary agreement was signed by Acting Director of EPS Milorad Grcic and Director of PowerChina Yang Bo. The construction of this energy facility was originally planned in 1990s and now EPS plans to complete the 350 MW project in cooperation with Chinese company.

The construction of a new unit will ensure Serbia’s sustainable industrial development and will be built in line with the latest EU environmental standards. The new unit represents replacement capacity for ageing TPP Morava and TPP Kolubara A. In 2018, Serbian Minister of Energy and Mining Aleksandar Antic said that EPS will look into the possibility of re-launching the project for the construction of TPP Kolubara B. He said that the Government adopted the decision and that a working group that will coordinate the project for the construction of 350 MW power plant has been established, adding that the project would ensure the long-term stability of the Serbian energy system, especially given the large number of renewable energy power plants that will be built in the near future. The start of construction could be expected in 2021. The construction of TPP Kolubara B, located in the town of Veliki Crljeni, started in the early 1990s, but shortly after was abandoned due to the break-up of Yugoslavia. In June 2011, EPS signed a preliminary agreement with Italian Edison to set up a joint venture for the construction of the plant and in 2012 the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) expressed interest in financing the project. However, in September 2013, the EBRD said it is no longer interested in financing the plant, due to its policy for limiting lending for coal-fired power plants construction projects and in 2014 the project was again abandoned.

 

 

 

 

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Region: Hungary’s MOL to boost oil supplies to Serbia amid U.S. sanctions

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto announced that MOL will increase crude oil and fuel supplies to Serbia following U.S. sanctions on the Serbian oil sector. He emphasized that MOL’s key role in Serbia’s supply chain ensures additional deliveries, though...

Expert critiques 2008 NIS privatization as major undervaluation, highlights lost strategic opportunities for Serbia

Professor Dragan Djuricin from the Faculty of Economics in Belgrade criticized the 2008 privatization of Serbia’s oil company NIS, calling it a significant undervaluation of one of the country’s most strategic assets. Djuricin noted that Deloitte, hired by the Serbian...

Serbia: Turkish company GridFlex to invest €17 million in electricity storage facility near Leskovac

The Turkish energy company GridFlex plans to invest 17 million euros in a new electricity storage facility near Leskovac, local authorities announced following a meeting between Mayor Goran Cvetanović and company representatives. GridFlex specializes in container-based battery storage systems aimed...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!