2030–2035 scenario annex: Gas...

Scenario one: High volatility, tight LNG markets In a scenario characterised by global LNG...

What the European gas...

The European natural gas market has moved decisively away from its pre-2020 equilibrium....

Policy without borders: How...

Electricity market coupling is often discussed in technical or commercial terms, but its...

Fragmented convergence: Why Southeast...

For much of the past decade, the dominant assumption shaping policy and market...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsCroatia: CROPEX sets...

Croatia: CROPEX sets new record in intraday trading for 15-minute products

The Croatian Power Exchange (CROPEX) achieved a new milestone on the intraday continuous market for the delivery day of 15 April 2025, recording its highest-ever trading volume for 15-minute products. A total of 2,305.5 MWh was traded in this product category, highlighting a significant shift toward more granular energy trading.

In addition, the volume of 60-minute products reached 7,081.6 MWh, bringing the total daily intraday trading volume to 9,387.2 MWh—a new record for CROPEX.

This development reflects the growing adaptation of market participants to the 15-minute trading resolution, which enables more precise portfolio management and system optimization. The increased use of shorter trading intervals is seen as a crucial step in enhancing flexibility and efficiency in the evolving energy market landscape.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

2030–2035 scenario annex: Gas prices, CBAM and export margins

Scenario one: High volatility, tight LNG markets In a scenario characterised by global LNG tightness, regulatory uncertainty, and persistent geopolitical risk, European gas prices remain volatile with frequent spikes. Average prices may moderate, but extreme events become more common. Under this...

Gas vs electricity procurement: Strategic choices fo Serbian exporters

Serbian exporters increasingly face a strategic choice: treat gas and electricity as separate procurement streams or integrate them into a unified energy risk strategy. The latter approach is rapidly becoming essential. Gas procurement indexed fully to TTF offers flexibility but...

Electricity prices, production costs, and export competitiveness: What Serbian manufacturers face when selling into the EU

Electricity pricing has shifted from a background cost to a central competitive variable for Serbian export-oriented production. For companies selling into the European Union, power prices now influence operating margins, contract structure, carbon exposure, and long-term bankability. This is...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!