Romania: GE Vernova secures...

GE Vernova has signed an agreement with Greenvolt International Power to supply wind...

Montenegro launches geological surveys...

Geological surveys for the Krusevo hydropower plant have started, marking the first concrete...

Montenegro: EPCG and France’s...

Montenegro’s state-owned power utility EPCG has signed a cooperation agreement with French renewable...

Croatia enters heating season...

Croatia is entering the new heating season with stable gas supplies, high storage...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeNews Serbia EnergySerbia: Srbijagas’ transformation...

Serbia: Srbijagas’ transformation into joint stock company by May 2021

Earlier in December, the Government adopted the restructuring plan of the company, which primarily entails the separation of activities of transportation and distribution of natural gas. These activities will be performed by Srbijagas’ subsidiaries Transportgas and Distribucijagas.Serbian Ministry of Energy and Mining said that it has formed a working group with the aim to monitor the implementation of the restructuring plan of gas company Srbijagas. Among other things, the plan envisages the transformation of this public enterprise into a joint stock company by 1 May 2021.

The implementation of the plan will create conditions for a stable and secure gas supply, as well as much more efficient and profitable operations of gas companies, which is also important for the infrastructural projects that are being realized. This is also an obligation taken by siging the Energy Community Treaty. The Energy Community has already expressed dissatisfaction with Serbia’s failure to implement the obligations taken in 2016 and proposes sanction if Serbia continues to delay their implementation.

 

 

 

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Serbia: MOL to expand Sremski Karlovci fuel storage terminal, strengthening energy infrastructure

Hungarian oil company MOL is set to expand its fuel storage terminal in Sremski Karlovci through a new round of investment. The expansion involves acquiring additional land from Dunav Oil and partnering with Naftachem, which will oversee construction and...

Serbia as a re-export hub: Europe’s gateway to third markets

In an increasingly globalized supply chain environment, Serbia is emerging not only as an engineering and manufacturing base but as a strategic re-export hub for EU companies aiming to access third markets. By combining favorable trade agreements, geographic positioning, and a...

From Čačak to Europe: Nearshoring shared business services with regional talent and real connectivity

Čačak sits in the heart of Serbia with an asset mix that plays perfectly to near-sourcing: a deep regional talent catchment, motorways that cut transit times to major hubs, and operating costs that let you scale shared business services...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!