How SEE electricity spreads...

Serbia’s industrial competitiveness is increasingly shaped not by domestic conditions alone but by...

Regional power-flow shifts after...

The shutdown of Pljevlja transforms Montenegro’s internal energy balance, but its implications extend...

Private wind producers in...

Montenegro’s power system is undergoing a quiet reordering of influence. Where state hydro...

Balancing costs in Montenegro’s...

As Montenegro steps into a future without Pljevlja’s coal-fired stability, the cost of...
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RES capacity

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Supported byClarion Owners Engineers
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Bulgaria: ESP signed preliminary contracts for 15 GW of new RES capacities

Bulgarian electricity transmission system operator ESO has signed preliminary contracts for 15 GW of new renewable energy capacity. That means that 7 to 8...

Bulgaria: ESP signed preliminary contracts for 15 GW of new RES capacity

Bulgarian electricity transmission system operator ESO has signed preliminary contracts for 15 GW of new renewable energy capacity. That means that 7 to 8...

Romania will increase from the target for the share of electricity derived from renewable resources

State Secretary at the Romanian Ministry of Energy Casian Nitulescu said that Romania will increase from the target for the share of electricity derived...

Greece, PPC expects 30 % EBITDA rise as a result of Enel purchase

Greek Public Power Corporation (PPC) expects that its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) will increase by 30 % as a result...

Regional power-flow shifts after the Pljevlja shutdown: Montenegro in a rewired Balkan energy landscape

The shutdown of Pljevlja transforms Montenegro’s internal energy balance, but its implications extend beyond national borders. In the interconnected Balkan power system, every addition...

Private wind producers in Montenegro: From peripheral players to system-defining actors

Montenegro’s power system is undergoing a quiet reordering of influence. Where state hydro once dominated unchallenged and Pljevlja provided the stable backbone, private wind...

Balancing costs in Montenegro’s post-coal power system

As Montenegro steps into a future without Pljevlja’s coal-fired stability, the cost of balancing becomes the defining economic metric of its power system. Balancing...

Montenegro’s power future: Transitioning from coal at Pljevlja to wind, hydro and import options

Montenegro finds itself at a key inflection point. The only coal-fired thermal power plant in the country, Yugoslav Thermal Power Plant Pljevlja (TPP Pljevlja),...

Hydro–storage–renewables integration strategy for SEE

Designing an integration strategy for hydropower, storage and renewables in South-East Europe means accepting that no single technology can deliver both decarbonisation and stability....
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