Who really controls power trading in the Western Balkans
Power trading in the Western Balkans has never simply been about electricity. It is about geography, interconnection politics, hydrology, capital, […]
Power trading in the Western Balkans has never simply been about electricity. It is about geography, interconnection politics, hydrology, capital, […]
Infrastructure does not lie. Where political speeches can overpromise and strategies can remain theoretical, infrastructure exposes whether a region truly
Europe’s seventy-percent cross-zonal electricity rule is not a bureaucratic exercise. It is a structural redefinition of how power markets in
South-East Europe remains a strange contradiction in Europe’s energy map. This is a region that has hydropower heritage, available renewable
Europe is rewriting its energy future. Electricity markets are being redesigned for precision, flexibility and integration. Gas politics have shifted
Europe is entering a completely new electricity era. Power markets are becoming faster, more precise and far more complex than
Infrastructure embodies intent. In South-East Europe, few projects illustrate that better than the Trans-Balkan Electricity Corridor. Beyond cables and substations,
The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism did not emerge from an environmental bureaucracy; it emerged from the heart of Europe’s industrial
Europe rarely enforces strict deadlines without deeper strategic intent. The requirement for European markets to make 70 percent of cross-zonal
South-East Europe remains one of the most structurally vulnerable electricity markets in Europe, not because it lacks generation potential or
The contribution of renewable energy sources to Serbia’s gross final energy consumption reached 25.8% in 2024, marking a modest increase
The Government of North Macedonia has approved the declaration of a crisis situation in the electricity supply system nationwide, following