Gas Industry

Bosnia and Herzegovina: Fire incident forces TPP Ugljevik offline at start of 2026 Read More »

Bosnia and Herzegovina: Fire incident forces TPP Ugljevik offline at start of 2026

Thermal power plant Ugljevik has been offline since the start of the year after a serious incident that occurred on 30 December, forcing the unit to disconnect from the power grid. According to available information, the outage was caused by a failure in the slag removal system, reportedly linked to human error. Malfunctions in the […]

Bosnia and Herzegovina: ERS launches tender for feasibility study on HPP Visegrad expansion Read More »

Bosnia and Herzegovina: ERS launches tender for feasibility study on HPP Visegrad expansion

Bosnia and Herzegovina’s state-owned power utility Elektroprivreda Republike Srpske (ERS) has launched a new procurement procedure to assess the possible expansion of the Visegrad hydropower plant, focusing on the installation of an additional generating unit. The tender was published through its subsidiary Hidroelektrane na Drini and includes the preparation of a conceptual design and a

Europe cuts the cord as Russian gas exports collapse to 1970s levels Read More »

Europe cuts the cord as Russian gas exports collapse to 1970s levels

Russian natural gas deliveries to European markets collapsed in 2025, plunging by roughly 44% compared with the previous year and hitting their lowest level since the mid-1970s. This historic decline followed the shutdown of the Ukrainian transit corridor in January and the European Union’s accelerating campaign to phase out Russian fossil fuel imports. Earlier this

Industrial electricity prices in South-East Europe in 2025 and outlook for 2026 Read More »

Industrial electricity prices in South-East Europe in 2025 and outlook for 2026

In 2025 industrial electricity prices across South-East Europe have stabilised into a narrower and more predictable corridor than during the crisis years, but they remain structurally higher than the pre-2021 baseline. For most South-East European markets, large industrial buyers are paying all-in electricity prices generally in the 95 to 130 euros per MWh band, depending

Electricity trading in South-East Europe in 2025: Import–export balances, price levels and regional market dynamics Read More »

Electricity trading in South-East Europe in 2025: Import–export balances, price levels and regional market dynamics

By 2025 South-East Europe’s electricity market has turned into a dense web of cross-border flows where almost every country is simultaneously an importer and an exporter, often within the same day. Annual balances, hourly flows and price patterns show a region that is no longer a peripheral appendage to the core EU market but an

CBAM as CAPEX driver: How carbon pricing will reshape see power utilities and coal fleets by 2030 Read More »

CBAM as CAPEX driver: How carbon pricing will reshape see power utilities and coal fleets by 2030

Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is about to turn from a regulatory acronym into a direct price signal that reshapes capital investment for South-East European power utilities and coal-fired thermal plants. From 2026, electricity imported into the European Union will carry a carbon cost that mirrors the EU emissions trading price. For non-EU countries in the

Digging for megawatts – coal mines, lignite basins and the future of thermal power in South-East Europe Read More »

Digging for megawatts – coal mines, lignite basins and the future of thermal power in South-East Europe

While hydropower determines how fat the margins are in wet years, coal and lignite still determine whether the lights stay on at scale in much of South-East Europe. Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Greece, Romania and North Macedonia all continue to rely on coal-fired thermal power plants (TPPs) for a substantial share of baseload. Behind

Water, steel and margins – How hydropower shapes the electricity economics of South-East Europe Read More »

Water, steel and margins – How hydropower shapes the electricity economics of South-East Europe

Hydropower is still the quiet balance-sheet engine of the South-East European power system. While wind and solar dominate headlines, it is the big river cascades, mountain reservoirs and ageing dams that decide whether utilities report record profits or scramble for imports at thin margins. Across Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania, North Macedonia, Croatia, Romania,

Financing the transition: How SEE utilities are funding multi-billion-euro CAPEX cycles and reshaping their balance sheets Read More »

Financing the transition: How SEE utilities are funding multi-billion-euro CAPEX cycles and reshaping their balance sheets

If operational stability defines the present of South-East Europe’s electricity utilities, investment and financing define their future. Across the region, utility balance sheets are repositioning around large capital-expenditure programmes covering renewable generation, grid digitalisation, environmental compliance, flexible backup capacity and storage. The dominant source of capital is not speculative private finance but long-tenor, policy-aligned financing

SEE’s power utilities: Production strength, trade balances, financial recovery and the new role in regional energy security Read More »

SEE’s power utilities: Production strength, trade balances, financial recovery and the new role in regional energy security

South-East Europe’s power utilities have moved from being passive state monopolies to becoming the most systemically influential corporates in their national economies. They are at once suppliers of baseload stability, hard-currency earners through cross-border electricity trade, primary vehicles for renewable-energy deployment, and quasi-sovereign financial institutions anchoring domestic banking and capital-market ecosystems. When looking across Serbia,

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