How SEE electricity spreads...

Serbia’s industrial competitiveness is increasingly shaped not by domestic conditions alone but by...

Regional power-flow shifts after...

The shutdown of Pljevlja transforms Montenegro’s internal energy balance, but its implications extend...

Private wind producers in...

Montenegro’s power system is undergoing a quiet reordering of influence. Where state hydro...

Balancing costs in Montenegro’s...

As Montenegro steps into a future without Pljevlja’s coal-fired stability, the cost of...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsBulgaria: Average price...

Bulgaria: Average price on IBEX DAM reached 89.6 euros/MWh in January

Traded volume on the day-ahead market of the Independent Bulgarian Energy Exchange (IBEX) reached 2,767,280 MWh in January 2024, 3% more compared to the previous month. The average daily traded volume in January amounted to 89,267 MWh. Traded volume in

January 2024 was 7% higher compared to the same month last year.

The average price on the day-ahead market in January amounted to 89.6 euros/MWh, which is 10% lower compared to December (81.6 euros/MWh), while the average peak price was 98.67 euros/MWh.

There were 113 registered participants on the IBEX day-ahead market, two fewer compared to the previous month.

On the intraday market, 245,928 MWh was traded, with the average weighted price of 100.93 euros/MWh.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Industry, electricity and the carbon clock: Serbia’s race to secure green power before CBAM reshapes the market

Europe’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) has introduced a new dimension of industrial competitiveness: the carbon clock. Every year that passes without decarbonisation increases the cost burden for exporters selling into the European Union. For Serbia, whose manufacturing base...

Serbia 2030: A manufacturing hub powered by wind, solar and engineering talent — or an energy-expensive periphery?

By 2030, Serbia will be defined by the decisions it makes today about electricity, industrial policy and renewable energy. Two futures exist in parallel. In the first, Serbia becomes the leading nearshore manufacturing hub for Central and Western Europe,...

The Green Megawatt Strategy: How Serbia can turn renewable energy into its strongest nearshoring advantage

The global industrial landscape is reorganising around energy. For decades, labour cost and geographic proximity were the core determinants of manufacturing location. Today, green electricity—its price, availability and carbon profile—has emerged as the most important variable in European industrial...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!