serbia

Financial model template for battery energy storage investments in Serbia, structured inputs, revenue stack logic, cost framework, financing structure and valuation architecture Read More »

Financial model template for battery energy storage investments in Serbia, structured inputs, revenue stack logic, cost framework, financing structure and valuation architecture

This financial model template is designed to provide investors with a structured analytical framework for evaluating battery energy storage projects in Serbia. It integrates engineering performance realities, Serbian system characteristics, TSO-defined operational roles and realistic market participation expectations. The objective is to enable disciplined modelling of cashflows, pricing behaviour, risk exposures and investment returns while […]

Battery storage in Serbia: Investor economics, TSO system logic, financing strategy and policy blueprint for strategic national deployment Read More »

Battery storage in Serbia: Investor economics, TSO system logic, financing strategy and policy blueprint for strategic national deployment

Battery energy storage will define Serbia’s electricity stability, competitiveness, and security of supply over the next decade. The technology is not an academic discussion, an environmental preference or a futuristic innovation; it is an economic asset class, a transmission stability instrument, a macroeconomic stabiliser and a strategic national capability. Serbia’s choice is not whether it

Battery storage in Serbia: From late starter to strategic energy powerhouse — system design, investor returns, TSO logic, competitiveness and policy path to 2035 Read More »

Battery storage in Serbia: From late starter to strategic energy powerhouse — system design, investor returns, TSO logic, competitiveness and policy path to 2035

Serbia stands at an inflection point in its electricity future. Decisions made between 2025 and 2030 will determine whether the country evolves into a modern, flexible, resilient energy economy capable of supporting industrial growth, renewable integration and market stability, or whether it remains structurally exposed to volatility, import dependence, fossil vulnerability and grid risk. At

Serbia enters 2026 with expanded renewable energy portfolio and growing wind capacity Read More »

Serbia enters 2026 with expanded renewable energy portfolio and growing wind capacity

As 2025 comes to a close, Serbia is entering the new year with a significantly expanded portfolio of renewable energy assets connected to its electricity system. The country’s total installed green capacity now stands at 3,683.4 MW, reflecting several key additions completed in the final weeks of the year. Wind energy led the year-end growth.

US grants NIS temporary operating license, easing Serbia’s fuel supply pressure Read More »

US grants NIS temporary operating license, easing Serbia’s fuel supply pressure

Serbian oil company NIS has gained short-term relief after US authorities granted permission for the company to continue operating until 23 January, easing immediate pressure on the country’s fuel supply chain. The authorization allows the Pančevo refinery to resume activity following weeks of disruption caused by sanctions-related constraints. The temporary approval is closely tied to

Serbia advances oil supply diversification with new Hungary–Novi Sad pipeline tender Read More »

Serbia advances oil supply diversification with new Hungary–Novi Sad pipeline tender

Serbia has taken a concrete step to diversify its crude oil supply routes with the launch of a public tender for a new cross-border pipeline connecting Hungary to Novi Sad. The procurement, opened by state-owned pipeline operator Transnafta, covers both construction works and technical supervision for the project. The proposed pipeline is considered a strategic

Carbon is the new currency: How trading schemes and green certificates will decide Serbia’s industrial winners in the EU market era Read More »

Carbon is the new currency: How trading schemes and green certificates will decide Serbia’s industrial winners in the EU market era

Carbon trading and green certificates are becoming the next decisive cost and competitiveness variables for South-East European energy systems and Serbia’s industrial base, sitting alongside CBAM, electricity pricing and decarbonisation CAPEX as core elements of the new regional market architecture. What was once a technical policy theme has now become a financial reality. Carbon prices,

Financing Serbia’s energy future: How EPS is structuring loans, investments and multi-billion-euro CAPEX to rebuild and transform the power system Read More »

Financing Serbia’s energy future: How EPS is structuring loans, investments and multi-billion-euro CAPEX to rebuild and transform the power system

The narrative of EPS’s financial and operational stabilisation is inseparable from the utility’s evolving capital-expenditure (CAPEX) and financing strategy. After years of emergency borrowing, reactive repair spending and short-tenor loans, EPS is now managing a deliberate, long-horizon investment pipeline totalling several billion euros. These investments are structured not as ad-hoc line items but as a

EPS as Serbia’s strategic energy anchor: Production, exports, financial recovery and macro-economic role Read More »

EPS as Serbia’s strategic energy anchor: Production, exports, financial recovery and macro-economic role

Elektroprivreda Srbije (EPS) today stands as the central pillar of Serbia’s energy system, emblematic of the transition from crisis-mode operations to stable, strategic utility performance underpinning macroeconomic stability, export earnings and industrial competitiveness. After the volatility of the early 2020s — characterised by deteriorating hydrology, rising import requirements and high European wholesale prices — EPS

Designing the backbone: How engineering outsourcing can fast-track Serbia’s mining fabrication strategy Read More »

Designing the backbone: How engineering outsourcing can fast-track Serbia’s mining fabrication strategy

A critical layer beneath everything previously argued about Serbia’s potential role in mining fabrication lies in a question few address explicitly, yet every serious industrial strategist understands instinctively: who engineers the complexity, and where does that engineering capacity actually live? Engineering outsourcing, when examined deeply, becomes neither a threat nor a supplement to Serbia’s mining

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