Romania: Parapet and Alerion...

Romanian renewable energy engineering company Parapet has signed seven new contracts with Italian...

North Macedonia: Day-ahead power...

In October 2025, electricity trading on North Macedonia’s day-ahead market reached 146,498 MWh,...

Greece: ExxonMobil, Energean and...

A new stage in Greece’s offshore energy exploration has begun as ExxonMobil, Energean,...

Croatia: CROPEX electricity trading...

In October 2025, a total of 1,449,339.1 MWh of electricity was traded on...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsBosnia and Herzegovina:...

Bosnia and Herzegovina: RS Government offers 124 million euros to buy back Comsar Energy and Ugljevik concessions

The Government of the Republic of Srpska (RS) plans to offer 124 million euros to purchase Rashid Serdarov’s company, Comsar Energy RS.

Energy and Mining Minister Petar Djokic said the cabinet had reviewed information from state energy firm Gas Res and authorized it to continue negotiations with the Russian company. An internationally certified auditor valued Comsar between 119 and 147 million euros, with the Government’s working figure set at 124 million euros. Comsar is now expected to respond to the offer, after which Gas Res will submit a final decision for approval.

Earlier this year, the initial valuation was around 120 million euros. Comsar then hired its own auditor, who in February estimated the company’s value at nearly 150 million euros. In 2013, Comsar was granted a concession to build and operate the coal-fired thermal power plant Ugljevik 3, along with three related concessions, including mining rights at the Ugljevik Istok 2 deposit. The coalfield, worth about 250 million euros, was intended to supply TPP Ugljevik 3, which was never built. Despite this, the concession contracts remained valid, prompting the RS Government to now offer 124 million euros to recover a resource it had effectively given away.

Although negotiations are ongoing, the Government approved in early April a first tranche of 30 million euros to initiate the takeover and reclaim the concession. Officials say the buyback is urgent because the existing TPP Ugljevik is facing coal shortages that could disrupt operations. Critics argue that the public is paying the price for poor past decisions, as authorities must now spend hundreds of millions to regain control over key natural resources.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Romania: Parapet and Alerion sign seven new solar projects totaling 80 MW

Romanian renewable energy engineering company Parapet has signed seven new contracts with Italian renewables developer Alerion, expanding their long-term partnership with projects totaling nearly 80.8 MW across Romania and Italy. Construction will take place in Romania’s Teleorman and Călărași counties...

North Macedonia: Day-ahead power trading jumps 82% year-on-year in October 2025

In October 2025, electricity trading on North Macedonia’s day-ahead market reached 146,498 MWh, marking an 81.7% increase compared to the same month last year and a 43% rise from September. According to the market operator MEMO, the average market-clearing price...

Greece: ExxonMobil, Energean and Helleniq launch new offshore exploration phase in Ionian Sea

A new stage in Greece’s offshore energy exploration has begun as ExxonMobil, Energean, and Helleniq Energy signed a farm-in agreement granting them joint ownership of 60% in Block 2 of the Ionian Sea, located northwest of Corfu. The signing...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!