Serbia’s workforce challenge: Can the country train enough engineers for the renewable boom? Read More »

Serbia’s workforce challenge: Can the country train enough engineers for the renewable boom?

Serbia’s renewable-energy sector is expanding at a pace the country has never experienced before. Wind farms, solar parks, hybrid plants, substations, transmission corridors, battery systems and industrial PPAs are all driving a surge in investment that will transform the energy landscape over the next decade. But beneath the visible momentum lies the most critical constraint—and […]

Transmission first: Why Serbia’s grid expansion will determine all future RES investments Read More »

Transmission first: Why Serbia’s grid expansion will determine all future RES investments

The future of Serbia’s renewable-energy sector will not be decided by auctions, PPA structures, investor appetite or available land. These elements shape the market, but they do not define its limits. The true bottleneck—and the ultimate enabler—of Serbia’s energy transition is the transmission grid. Every planned wind farm, solar park, battery system, hybrid plant or

Serbia’s green supply chain: Can domestic manufacturers enter Europe’s renewable equipment ecosystem? Read More »

Serbia’s green supply chain: Can domestic manufacturers enter Europe’s renewable equipment ecosystem?

As Serbia accelerates its renewable-energy transition, a deeper strategic question has begun to emerge: can the country evolve from being merely a construction market for wind and solar plants into a manufacturing and supply-chain hub for Europe’s renewable ecosystem? The answer carries enormous implications for Serbia’s industrial competitiveness, export potential, workforce development and long-term economic

The rise of energy storage: Why batteries will decide Serbia’s renewable stability by 2035 Read More »

The rise of energy storage: Why batteries will decide Serbia’s renewable stability by 2035

As Serbia accelerates the growth of its renewable-energy sector, an uncomfortable truth is becoming visible: wind and solar alone cannot deliver a stable, reliable and flexible power system. The grid absorbs what it can, but its structural limitations are becoming clearer with each new project. Transmission corridors in Banat saturate during peak winds. Distribution networks

Engineering risk = financial risk: Why quality failures in RES construction turn into millions lost Read More »

Engineering risk = financial risk: Why quality failures in RES construction turn into millions lost

In Serbia’s expanding renewable-energy sector, the relationship between engineering and finance is becoming clearer than ever. The two were once treated as separate worlds—the engineers focused on foundations, cables, substations and turbines, while financiers focused on debt structures, IRR curves, PPA prices and repayment schedules. But the maturing market has erased this separation. In a

PPA revolution: How corporate PPAs will reshape Serbia’s industrial competitiveness Read More »

PPA revolution: How corporate PPAs will reshape Serbia’s industrial competitiveness

For decades, Serbian industry operated in an electricity environment defined by state utilities, regulated tariffs and predictable—if sometimes volatile—market conditions. Manufacturers, logistics companies, metal processors, chemical plants, IT parks and agribusiness operators all relied on a stable supply of relatively affordable power. The structure was simple: EPS generated the energy, EMS moved it across the

Who owns the transition? The growing influence of private investors, funds and strategic operators in Serbia’s RES market Read More »

Who owns the transition? The growing influence of private investors, funds and strategic operators in Serbia’s RES market

The story of Serbia’s renewable-energy sector is no longer defined by a handful of early movers or public-sector initiatives. A deeper shift is underway—one driven by private investors, infrastructure funds, energy utilities, independent power producers and strategic operators who now determine the pace and shape of Serbia’s transition. As the country accelerates its renewable build-out,

HV/MV infrastructure: The unseen backbone of Serbia’s renewable build-out Read More »

HV/MV infrastructure: The unseen backbone of Serbia’s renewable build-out

The growth of renewable energy in Serbia is often narrated through visible symbols: turbine towers rising above agricultural fields, solar panels stretching across the landscape, cranes assembling nacelles, substations humming with new capacity. But the real story of Serbia’s energy transition is not written in these visible elements. It is written in the invisible backbone

Wind vs. solar: Serbia’s new competition for land, grid and investors Read More »

Wind vs. solar: Serbia’s new competition for land, grid and investors

Serbia’s renewable-energy landscape was once simple. Wind dominated early development, driven by strong resource potential in Banat and a supportive feed-in tariff that attracted pioneers into the sector. Solar lagged behind for years, held back by policy uncertainty, licensing complexity and a perception that Serbia’s continental climate could not match the economics seen in southern

Local content, global standards: What international developers expect from Serbian contractors Read More »

Local content, global standards: What international developers expect from Serbian contractors

As Serbia’s renewable-energy market expands, a new dynamic has begun to define the sector: the interaction between international developers and Serbian contractors. This relationship sits at the heart of Serbia’s ability to scale wind and solar capacity efficiently, safely and in line with the expectations of global investors. International developers bring capital, technology, procurement networks

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