LNG in the Balkans:...

The rise of liquefied natural gas from a niche commodity to the dominant...

Montenegro as a wind...

Montenegro is not the largest renewable market in Southeast Europe. It does not...

De-risking wind in Southeast...

From an Owner’s Engineer’s vantage point, Southeast Europe’s onshore wind market is entering...

Investor brief: How risk...

Investing in a wind park is fundamentally about converting a natural resource into...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsRomania: 258 million...

Romania: 258 million euro cogeneration plant to be built in Craiova

 

Romania’s energy ministry signed 257.8 million euro agreement with local electricity producer Societatea Electrocentrale Craiova for the construction of a 295 MW natural gas-fired cogeneration power plant.

The financing is part of the country’s National Recovery and Resilience Plan and 825.8 million lei out of the sum are non-reimbursable funds, the energy ministry said in a press release.

“The investment at Craiova is designed to benefit from the newest relevant technologies, ensuring that all of Craiova’s residents have safe access to thermal power and electricity with low carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions,” energy minister Sebastian Burduja said.

The power plant will replace existing coal-based generation capacities and contribute to reaching power and climate targets in Romania’s 2021-2030 Integrated National Energy and Climate Plan. The project will reduce pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, falling below the 250 gCO2/kWh emission limit related to the useful power output.

 

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

LNG in the Balkans: How global gas markets could redefine Serbia’s energy strategy

The rise of liquefied natural gas from a niche commodity to the dominant balancing force in global energy markets has reshaped Europe’s gas landscape. Nowhere is this transformation more significant than in the Balkans, where countries once fully dependent...

Montenegro as a wind investment gateway — low regulatory friction, euro currency, and strategic export potential

Montenegro is not the largest renewable market in Southeast Europe. It does not have Romania’s vast plains, Serbia’s gigawatt-scale ambition, or Croatia’s deep EU grid integration. And yet, Montenegro is emerging as one of the most strategic gateways for...

De-risking wind in Southeast Europe: An Owner’s Engineer’s perspective on EPC certainty and investor security

From an Owner’s Engineer’s vantage point, Southeast Europe’s onshore wind market is entering a defining phase—where investor capital, construction excellence, and policy reliability must intersect with precision. In Serbia, Croatia, Montenegro, and Romania, we are now routinely aligning global...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!