Serbia: MOL’s potential acquisition of NIS retail assets would not monopolize fuel market
Public debate in Serbia over the possible acquisition of Naftna Industrija Srbije (NIS) retail assets by Hungary’s MOL Group has intensified in […]
Public debate in Serbia over the possible acquisition of Naftna Industrija Srbije (NIS) retail assets by Hungary’s MOL Group has intensified in […]
Serbia’s gas market is no longer a purely contractual story about volumes bought from one supplier and delivered through one
Hungary’s expansion in Serbia is no longer a set of isolated deals. It is increasingly legible as a two-track strategy
When the CBAM lens that has already reshaped thinking on green electricity is applied rigorously to natural gas, the conclusion
Serbia still has a narrow but realistic window to position itself as a near-shore green manufacturing hub for EU supply
For most of the last decade, power purchase agreements in Serbia were evaluated on a single dominant variable: price. The
Serbia’s energy transition is still described almost entirely in megawatts. New projects are announced in MW, targets are framed in
Serbia’s response to the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is quietly drifting toward a solar-heavy narrative. This is understandable. Solar
In Serbia’s debate on CBAM exposure, grid infrastructure is still treated as a background constraint—important, but secondary. That framing is
Serbia’s debate on green electricity and CBAM exposure has so far focused on capacity build-out and contract pricing. Both matter,
As Serbia’s renewable fleet moves from isolated projects toward system-material portfolios, the center of gravity in value creation shifts away
A 400–600 MW onshore wind portfolio in Serbia behaves fundamentally differently from a solar-dominated build-out once projects reach system-material size.