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...

The Balkan grid at...

As winter settles across South-East Europe, the region’s electricity landscape enters a season...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsSerbia: Energy transition...

Serbia: Energy transition is our reality

The CEO of Serbia’s national power company (EPS) said it has clear development plans to help ensure the country’s energy independence.

Dusan Zivkovic, acting CEO of EPS, told the opening of a power industry conference that the company is intensively planning investments in new capacities, especially in renewable sources. He said it would provide certain, reliable and quality electricity supplies to both households and companies.

“The energy transition is our reality and we have a higher number of participants in the energy market from the private sector every day along with state companies taking part more actively,” Zivkovic said.

According to Zivkovic, the EPS is investing in a 656 megawatt hydropower plant, as well as wind and solar power plants.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

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...

The competitive edge: How Clarion’s EPC execution framework helps Serbia attract international capital and technology

As competition for investment intensifies across Central and Southeastern Europe, Serbia must distinguish itself not only through incentives and geography, but through execution capability. Global investors increasingly prefer markets where risk can be measured, controlled, and contractually allocated. They invest where...

Bankability starts with engineering: Why lenders are now demanding EPC risk matrices, ITPs and grid readiness in Serbia

Project finance is changing rapidly. What lenders once accepted as “EPC contractor reputation” has evolved into a rigorous, quantifiable requirement: engineering traceability, risk transparency, and asset-level assurance. Lenders across Europe and the Western Balkans are tightening due-diligence criteria as energy markets...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!