Weekly energy market update:...

Brent oil futures for the Front Month on the ICE market reached their...

Europe: Electricity prices stable...

During the fourth week of November, electricity prices in most major European markets...

Europe: Southern demand rises...

During the week of November 24, electricity demand showed a contrasting pattern across...

Europe: Solar production declines...

During the week of November 24, solar photovoltaic (PV) energy production declined in...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeNews Serbia EnergySerbia­: WindVision plans...

Serbia­: WindVision plans to build a hybrid power plant near Alibunar

The municipality of Alibunar launched a public inspection of the Detailed Regulation Plan for the Banat 5 renewable energy complex. The plan envisages the construction of a wind farm and a solar power plant.

The maximum installed capacity of the wind farm Banat 5 will be around 120 MW, while a further analysis will determine the capacity of the solar power plant, according to the plan. The investor is WV International Ventures, a subsidiary of the Belgian-Dutch company WindVision.

Depending on the wind potentials, the construction of several independent wind turbine fields, with matching connecting medium-voltage cables and substations is planned. According to preliminary analyses, the construction of 20 to 30 wind turbines with individual output of 4-8 MW is planned.

In 2020, WindVision and the municipality of Alibunar signed an agreement on the right of easement for the use and installation of electricity transmission cables for the new wind farm, Banat 1. The wind farm complex will include two wind farms: Banat 1 near Vladimirovac and Banat 2 near Nikolinci. 44 wind turbines will be built in Vladimirovac with a total installed capacity of 186 MW, while in Nikolinci, there will be 25 turbines with a total installed capacity of 140 MW. 

In 2022, WindVision said that it is planning to build a 150 MW wind farm Banat 4 near Pancevo.

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: SEEPEX day-ahead market sees November trading dip amid stable prices

In November 2025, a total of 466,713.6 MWh of electricity was traded on the day-ahead market at the Serbian energy exchange SEEPEX, marking an 8.8% decrease compared to October. This corresponds to an average of 15,557.1 MWh traded per...

Serbia 2035: The fully integrated renewable economy

By 2035, Serbia will be a profoundly different energy and economic system than the one it operates today. The country stands at the threshold of a rare structural transformation—one that touches electricity, industry, manufacturing, transport, construction, finance and regional...

Serbia’s workforce challenge: Can the country train enough engineers for the renewable boom?

Serbia’s renewable-energy sector is expanding at a pace the country has never experienced before. Wind farms, solar parks, hybrid plants, substations, transmission corridors, battery systems and industrial PPAs are all driving a surge in investment that will transform the...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!