Slovenia: NPP Krsko exceeds...

In September 2025, the Krsko nuclear power plant, jointly owned by Slovenia and...

Romania: Electrica completes 27...

Romanian electricity distributor and supplier Electrica has completed the construction of the Satu...

Romania: NEPI Rockcastle launches...

NEPI Rockcastle, the largest owner and operator of shopping centers in Central and...

Bulgaria: Bulgargaz secures LNG...

Bulgaria’s state-owned natural gas supplier Bulgargaz has completed a tender to meet part...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsBiH: RiTE Ugljevik...

BiH: RiTE Ugljevik to start delivering electricity to Slovenia in January

RiTE Ugljevik will start delivering electricity to Slovenia no later than mid-January, based on the arbitration in favour of Elektrogospodarstvo Slovenije (now HSE).

It was announced that the supply would begin in 2024, but the director of RiTE Ugljevik Diko Cvijetinovic said that there would be a slight delay, adding that the contract has been finalised, and everything should be completed by mid-January.

Cvijetinovic did not specify whether an agreement had been reached regarding the repayment of the 130 million euros debt, which RiTE Ugljevik, along with one-third of the produced electricity, is obligated to pay to the Slovenian company.

In July, a Belgrade arbitration court ruled that RiTE Ugljevik had to pay 67 million euros in compensation to Slovenian state-owned electricity producer HSE. The court found that the Slovenian company is entitled to compensation for electricity not delivered by RiTE Ugljevik in the period from June 2011 to December 2021. In November, it was announced that the company would have to pay an additional 57.8 million euros in interest. In 2014, Slovenian company Elektrogospodarstvo submitted a lawsuit against BiH at the International Center for Settlement of Disputes (ICSID) in Washington, claiming the amount of 750 million euros. If BiH loses this dispute, with all interest it will be obliged to pay almost 1.5 billion euros. The arbitration proceedings started in late 2015.

During the construction of TPP Ugljevik in 1981, Bosnia and Herzegovina invested two-thirds of the necessary funds, while Slovenia invested the remaining funds. When TPP became operational in 1985, Slovenians required regular deliveries of produced electricity by the funds they invested in the construction. The civil war in former Yugoslavia interrupted this deal and deliveries have been stopped since then.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

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...

The new currency of trust: Where technical risk meets financial consequence

In modern infrastructure, oversight isn’t a paperwork ritual—it’s a translation exercise. Design choices, test results, and schedule slips must be converted into hard numbers a credit committee can act on. That alignment of technical risk with financial consequence has...

When ESG gaps halt financing: The Owner’s Engineer’s role in industrial projects

In industrial construction today, an ESG non-conformity can hold a loan tranche as effectively as a failed transformer test. Lenders and investors now expect the Owner’s Engineer (OE) to treat environmental, social, and governance risks with the same rigor...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!