Financing wind in Montenegro,...

The landscape of renewable finance in Southeast Europe has undergone a profound transformation....

How Southeast Europe’s grid...

Wind development in Southeast Europe is accelerating at a pace unimaginable only a...

Serbia–Romania–Croatia: The new triangular...

For years, the Iberian Peninsula defined what a wind powerhouse looked like inside...

The bankability gap in...

The transformation of Southeast Europe into a credible wind-investment region has been rapid,...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeUncategorizedRomania: Polish R.Power...

Romania: Polish R.Power buys 200 MW solar projects

Polish solar developer R.Power has secured an over 200 MW project pipeline in Romania and expects to bring the entire photovoltaic capacity online by the end of 2025, the company said in a statement.

The pipeline includes multiple solar schemes with grid connection agreements. Part of those projects have permits in place and will enter construction this year while building works on the rest are planned to be initiated in the first half of 2025.

R.Power is holding talks with parties that could potentially buy the generated electricity. The target groups are “industrial leaders in Romania open to off-take large and stable volumes of green energy” under power purchase agreements (PPA).

R.Power operates in Poland, Romania, Italy, Portugal, Spain and Germany and has an over 21-GWp portfolio of PV and battery energy storage assets across Europe. In Romania, the company have around 1 GW of projects in its development portfolio.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Financing wind in Montenegro, Serbia, Croatia and Romania — why international lenders are returning to Southeast Europe

The landscape of renewable finance in Southeast Europe has undergone a profound transformation. A decade ago, lenders viewed the region with a degree of caution, shaped by fluctuating regulatory frameworks, limited track records, and the perceived fragility of local...

Serbia–Romania–Croatia: The new triangular wind corridor — is Southeast Europe becoming Europe’s next Iberia?

For years, the Iberian Peninsula defined what a wind powerhouse looked like inside Europe: strong resource, open land, grid-ready corridors, competitive auctions, and the steady inflow of international capital. Investors seeking scale, yield, and policy clarity migrated naturally towards...

Regional gas geopolitics: Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, and Serbia in the new European gas map

The transformation of Europe’s gas landscape is redrawing the political and commercial map of Southeast Europe. In the span of just a few years, the region has shifted from a single-supplier, pipeline-dominated system to a multi-entry, LNG-influenced, competition-driven gas...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!