Romania: INVL Renewable Energy...

INVL Renewable Energy Fund I, managed by INVL Asset Management and focused on...

Croatia: Summary of Guarantees...

On 29 July, a total of 231,827 Guarantees of Origin (GOs) were sold...

Bulgaria: TPP Maritsa 3...

Bulgarian thermal power plant Maritsa 3 reported a net loss of €2.7 million...

Bulgaria: Bobov Dol thermal...

The Bulgarian thermal power plant Bobov Dol posted a net profit of approximately...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeUncategorizedRomania: Electrica acquired...

Romania: Electrica acquired a 57 MW solar project

Electrica has acquired a local company holding the rights to a 57 MW solar project in the northwestern part of Romania.

New Trend Energy, the special purpose vehicle developing the scheme, was bought for 3.25 million euros, Electrica said in a bourse filing.

The transaction, originally agreed in the summer of 2021, makes Electrica the owner of a photovoltaic project in Doba, Satu Mare county, located on the border with Hungary and Ukraine. The Satu Mare 3 scheme is currently in the shovel-ready phase.

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: INVL Renewable Energy Fund I secures €29.3 million loan for 71 MW solar project

INVL Renewable Energy Fund I, managed by INVL Asset Management and focused on renewable energy projects, has obtained a €29.3 million loan from Kommunalkredit Austria to finance the construction of a 71 MW solar power plant in Dolj County,...

Albania: Voltalia’s Karavasta solar power plant generates 132 GWh in first half of 2025

French renewable energy company Voltalia reported that its 140 MW Karavasta solar power plant in southwestern Albania generated a total of 132 GWh of electricity in the first half of 2025. The plant began producing electricity in December 2023. Half of...

Romania reaches over 228,000 prosumers by end of May 2025

By the end of May 2025, Romania recorded 228,302 prosumers—electricity users who generate power through solar panels and feed surplus energy into the national grid—according to data from the Energy Regulatory Authority (ANRE). Their combined installed capacity reached 2,726...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!