Hungary: Paks 2 moves...

The Hungarian Atomic Energy Authority (OAH) has issued new construction permits enabling the...

Hungary: HUPX day-ahead power...

The average day-ahead electricity price on the Hungarian power exchange HUPX reached 122.09...

Bulgaria: Bulgargaz proposes lower...

Bulgarian state-owned gas supplier Bulgargaz has proposed a lower wholesale natural gas price...

Europe: TTF gas prices...

In the first week of November 2025, TTF natural gas futures traded within...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeNews Serbia EnergySerbia: EPS has...

Serbia: EPS has no competition in households electricity supply

Although the electricity market in Serbia has been liberalized for more than three years, state-owned power utility EPS is the sole supplier of electricity to Serbian households.

Serbian households have the right to choose their own supplier, but that right has not been exercised so far, because EPS offers electricity at prices far below market ones, which means that independent suppliers would have to suffer losses in order to offer prices competitive with EPS’.

Former Deputy Minister of Energy Slobodan Ruzic said that retail price of electricity for households is not realistic, which is the only reason why energy suppliers and traders do not compete with EPS in supplying electricity to households. He noted that the price of 64 eurocents/kWh is even below EPS’ production price, but the state leads its social policy over the price of electricity, which is significantly lower compared to other countries in the region. However, EPS sells electricity to traders in Serbia and region at market prices, thus covering the losses made in the supply of households.

According to Ruzic, independent suppliers will have the motivation to participate in the supply of Serbian households only if the price rises above 7 eurocents/kWh, plus VAT and other excise duties.

For comparison, the price of electricity for households in Serbia is 19 % lower than in Macedonia, 20 % lower than in Albania, 21 % lower than in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 31 % lower than in Montenegro and 50 % lower than in Croatia.

Earlier this week, Acting Director of EPS Milorad Grcic said that EPS currently holds 97.25 % of electricity market in Serbia, which includes the supply of households, small and medium enterprises, public institution and large industrial consumers.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Design certainty, bankable outcomes: Engineering that inspires investor confidence

Bankability begins long before contracts are signed or funding is arranged. It starts in the design office, where each technical decision defines cost exposure, construction risk, and operating reliability. For investors and lenders, engineering soundness is not a technical...

Technical due diligence as investor defense: The OE as lenders’ first line of verification

Technical due diligence (TDD) transforms project ambition into factual verification. For investors, it is the first barrier against unrealistic proposals. The OE leads this process, reviewing engineering documentation, permits, contractual structure, and resource planning to confirm that a project...

From obligation to advantage: How ESG and compliance create bankable assurance

Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) due diligence has moved from optional to mandatory. Lenders and export-credit agencies demand alignment with international standards such as IFC Performance Requirements and Equator Principles. The OE ensures that environmental and social management systems...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!