A trader-led structural model...

In South-East Europe, gas–power interaction has moved decisively beyond simple fuel substitution logic....

Liquidity, LNG volatility, basis...

South-East Europe’s gas markets have quietly crossed a structural threshold. What once functioned...

Rising U.S. LNG dependence...

The European Union’s growing dependence on U.S. LNG is often framed as a...

European gas prices at...

European gas prices have fallen to their lowest levels in more than a...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeUncategorizedSerbia: Electricity production...

Serbia: Electricity production at Vinca incinerating plant to start in May

Serbian Vinca Solid Waste Management Center will start producing heat and electricity at full capacity in May 2024, upon the completion of the test operations. According to the president of the Temporary Organ of the City of Belgrade, Aleksandar Sapic, this facility will enable around 5% of electrical and around 10% of heating energy from the waste disposed there.

– I know what the importance of this facility is, due to the new ecological standard which we are all trying to impose in Belgrade in many aspects. This is a facility for the thermal processing of municipal waste, which will be used for the central heating of Belgrade. This way, pollution in the capital of Serbia will be reduced, and waste will replace fossil fuels to a considerable extent – Sapic said.

Vladimir Milovanovic, the director of the company Beo Cista Energija, specified that the treatment for the disposal of waste from fifteen municipalities of the city of Belgrade would be done that way and said that the certification of that project had proven that carbon dioxide emissions would be reduced by 210,000 tons equivalent annually.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Trading Southeast Europe’s power markets: A practical playbook for signals, timing, and risk

Electricity trading in Southeast Europe (SEE) is no longer about forecasting average prices. It is about understanding when prices break away from expectations, where congestion appears before it is visible in spot markets, and how volatility migrates across borders....

Spreads, congestion, and flexibility: Why SEE has become Europe’s real power trading arena

Electricity trading in Southeast Europe (SEE) has entered a new phase. The region is no longer defined by static net import or export positions, nor by simple convergence toward EU benchmarks. Instead, SEE has become Europe’s most dynamic trading arena—a...

How Europe’s power market redesign is exporting volatility into Southeast Europe

Europe’s electricity market is not becoming calmer. It is becoming more precise. The distinction matters profoundly for Southeast Europe (SEE). What is often described as stabilisation at the EU level—through market redesign, long-term contracts, and pricing reform—is in practice...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!