A trader-led structural model...

In South-East Europe, gas–power interaction has moved decisively beyond simple fuel substitution logic....

Liquidity, LNG volatility, basis...

South-East Europe’s gas markets have quietly crossed a structural threshold. What once functioned...

Rising U.S. LNG dependence...

The European Union’s growing dependence on U.S. LNG is often framed as a...

European gas prices at...

European gas prices have fallen to their lowest levels in more than a...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsRomania, More than...

Romania, More than 10,000 MW of new capacity will be connected to the network by 2031

State Secretary at the Romanian Ministry of Energy Dan Dragan said that more than 10,000 MW of new capacity will be connected to the network by 2031.

Dragan said that, through the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) only, almost 7 GW of capacity will be connected to the network. The PNRR will work in parallel with the contracts for difference that are currently being developed to reach the 10 GW mark until 2031.

He noted that the funds for these investments are already available, while the signing of the contract and the start of these investments will follow. The Ministry is already in the signing phase for new high-efficiency cogeneration capacities for district heating services, followed by green hydrogen, and then the signing of contracts for new production capacities from renewable sources. He said that over 3 billion euros available for these projects.

In mid-2022, consultancy firm REI, a total of 668 submissions for wind and solar projects, with a combined installed capacity of 3.5 GW, were made for financing under the PNRR.

According to the PNRR, for the installation of solar power plants companies could request grants worth between 425,000 and 750,000 euros per MW. For wind farms, interested companies could request non-reimbursable support of up to 1.3 million euros per MW.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Sanctions enforcement becomes a pricing variable in southeast Europe oil flows

The latest EU sanctions targeting individual oil traders and facilitators connected to Russian exports do not create new legal constraints for the southeast European oil market. Instead, they reprice execution risk, transforming sanctions from binary compliance events into continuous...

A trader-led structural model with LNG and power price transmission (2026–2030)

In South-East Europe, gas–power interaction has moved decisively beyond simple fuel substitution logic. Spark spreads now act as the principal transmission mechanism of volatility, determining not how much gas is consumed, but when gas-fired generation becomes marginal and how...

Liquidity, LNG volatility, basis risk and power price transmission

South-East Europe’s gas markets have quietly crossed a structural threshold. What once functioned as a peripheral extension of continental Europe’s pipeline system is now fully embedded in a globalised gas-LNG-power complex, where price signals travel faster than molecules and...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!