From domestic security to regional shock absorber: Serbia’s quiet role in South-East Europe’s power stability
Serbia’s electricity system has crossed a threshold that is easy to miss if one looks only at domestic balance sheets. […]
Serbia’s electricity system has crossed a threshold that is easy to miss if one looks only at domestic balance sheets. […]
Serbia’s power system enters the second half of the 2020s with a level of seasonal adequacy that stands out in
The divergence between Serbia and Romania in the 2025–2028 period marks one of the most consequential structural shifts in South-East
Serbia’s electricity system is no longer defined primarily by its ability to satisfy domestic demand. Over the last decade, and
Serbia enters the 2025–2027 period with a power system profile that is increasingly atypical within South-East Europe. While much of
Serbia has taken formal steps to secure the continued operation of NIS amid ongoing negotiations over a potential ownership change
Hungary’s MOL Group has taken a major step toward reshaping the energy landscape in central and southeastern Europe by reaching
Serbia has taken another institutional step in restructuring its gas sector by formally designating a company to oversee and manage
Serbian oil company NIS has entered a new ownership phase following months of US sanctions and negotiations over its shareholder
Fuel production has resumed at the Pančevo oil refinery in Serbia after an almost two-month shutdown, restoring a critical part
When measured against its regional peers, Elektroprivreda Srbije (EPS) is increasingly lagging—not in stated ambition, but in execution speed, project scale, and repeatable
Serbia’s state-owned power utility Elektroprivreda Srbije (EPS) has revised the scale of its much-publicised investment programme, clarifying that the planned capital envelope