Romania: OMV Petrom discovers...

OMV Petrom, an oil and gas company, has announced a successful natural gas...

Montenegro: EPCG to keep...

Milutin Đukanović, Chairman of the Board at Montenegro’s power utility EPCG, announced that...

Greece: Variable electricity prices...

In July, the price of variable-rate electricity rose sharply, reaching levels not seen...

Croatia begins environmental review...

Croatia’s Ministry of Environmental Protection and Green Transition has initiated the process to...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeNews Serbia EnergySerbia: TPP Kostolac...

Serbia: TPP Kostolac B3 one of the most important EPS projects

Minister of Mining and Energy Zorana Mihajlovic and Acting Director of EPS Milorad Grcic concluded, during their visit to the construction site, that the construction of a new unit at thermal power plant Kostolac B is one of the most important projects for power utility EPS and the energy system of Serbia, therefore, the delays in its implementation are inadmissible and works on the project must be accelerated.

Minister Mihajlovic pointed out that current timetable envisages the completion of the project in the fall of 2022, which is inadmissible, adding that intensive talks with the Chinese contractor CMEC will be held in order to speed up the project. She also said that CMEC was the first company which announced delays to the project due to the coronavirus pandemic.

CMEC is a main contractor in the project for the construction of the third unit at coal-fired thermal power plant Kostolac B, which is a part of a larger project for the modernization of Kostolac B at a total cost of some 712 million dollars. The construction of unit B3 will cost 520 million euros and it will produce 2.5 billion kWh of electricity per year, thus boosting EPS’ production capacity by some 5 %. Implementation of the project for the modernization of TPP Kostolac B was officially launched in January 2016. In order to finance this project, state-owned power utility EPS obtained a preferential loan from Chinese Exim Bank. The maturity of the loan is 20 years, with a 7-years grace period and fixed interest of 2.5 %. In 2018, it was estimated that the new unit will be completed by the end of 2020.

 

 

 

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Serbia: Kragujevac launches €44 million citywide gasification project

A new framework agreement valued at 44 million euros has been signed to expand the natural gas infrastructure throughout the city of Kragujevac in central Serbia. The project will be implemented by local company DM Invest in partnership with...

Region: Serbia and Hungary finalize plans for cross-border crude oil pipeline

Serbian state-owned company Transnafta and Hungarian energy group MOL have agreed on the technical specifications for a new crude oil pipeline that will connect the two countries. According to the Serbian Ministry of Energy, the pipeline will cover 113...

Serbia: SEEPEX day-ahead electricity trading volume rises 0.4% in June 2025 amid price declines

In June 2025, a total of 505,516.5 MWh of electricity was traded on the day-ahead market at the Serbian energy exchange SEEPEX, marking a 0.4% increase compared to May. The average daily traded volume stood at 16,850.6 MWh. Compared...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!