Slovenia: Climate negotiator challenges...

Former Slovenian State Secretary and climate negotiator Zoran Kus has filed a petition...

Romania: Constanța to get...

A new high-efficiency cogeneration plant is under development on the site of the...

Romania: Ministry of Energy...

The Romanian Ministry of Energy has finalized a five-point plan aimed at lowering...

Bosnia and Herzegovina: EPBiH...

State-owned power utility EPBiH has opened a tender for the preparation of the...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeNews Serbia EnergySerbia, EPS recorded...

Serbia, EPS recorded a net loss in the amount of 678 million euros in the first nine months of 2022

Serbian state-owned power utility EPS recorded a net loss in the amount of 678 million euros in the first nine months of 2022, compared to a profit of some 72 million euros in the same period last year .

The company’s revenues increased by 19.4 % in the first nine months of the year, reaching a total of 2.21 billion euros, but its expenditures rose by 60.7 % in the same period to 2.72 billion euros.

In the first nine months of 2022, EPS produced a total of 25.5 TWh of electricity, which is 12 % less compared to the same period in 2021. Hydropower plants generated 6.7 TWh of electricity, while the generation of coal-fired power plants amounted to 15.8 TWh.

EPS recorded a loss of 418 million euros in the first half of 2022. The main reason for such huge losses is decreased electricity generation and subsequent imports at extremely high prices. EPS also started importing coal, mostly from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro, for which it spent around 9.5 million euros in the first half of 2022. However, by far most costly item is imported electricity – in H1 2022 EPS imported 2,356 GWh of electricity at the average price of 222 euros/MWh, which amounts to more than 520 million euros. The loss due to bad management and untimely mining of coal is measured not only by the cost of importing expensive electricity due to the lack of own production, but also by the lost profit that it would have had if it had exported electricity at such high prices on the foreign markets.

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: Serbia, Hungary and Russia advance plans for strategic oil pipeline project

Serbia’s Minister of Mining and Energy, Dubravka Djedovic, met with Russian Deputy Energy Minister Pavel Sorokin and Hungary’s State Secretary for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Peter Sztaray, to discuss the implementation of the planned Serbia-Hungary oil pipeline. She stated...

Serbia: EPS begins testing Kostolac wind farm

State-owned power utility EPS has started testing the switchgear at the Kostolac wind farm, the company’s first wind energy project with an installed capacity of 66 MW. The tests are being carried out by teams from the transmission system...

Serbia: Banatski Dvor gas storage facility nears completion of initial expansion phase

Construction work on the first four boreholes at Serbia’s only underground gas storage facility in Banatski Dvor is nearing completion. Three boreholes have already been finished, while the fourth is expected to be completed in October, allowing the first...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!