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OX2 Romania expands wind portfolio with acquisition of 235 MW projects Read More »

OX2 Romania expands wind portfolio with acquisition of 235 MW projects

OX2 Romania, the local subsidiary of Swedish OX2 Group, has acquired three new wind projects totaling 235 MW from Future Power, further expanding its footprint in Romania’s rapidly growing renewable energy sector. The new sites are located in the Vaslui and Vrancea counties, bringing OX2’s Romanian portfolio to over 1.1 GW. The company now manages […]

Europe: Solar production declines while wind output rises in late November markets Read More »

Europe: Solar production declines while wind output rises in late November markets

During the week of November 24, solar photovoltaic (PV) energy production declined in most major European electricity markets compared to the previous week. The German market experienced the largest drop, falling 54%, followed by France (13%) and Spain (10%). The Portuguese market recorded the smallest decrease at 8%. The Italian market was an exception, reversing

Montenegro installs Europe’s largest operating wind turbine at Gvozd wind farm Read More »

Montenegro installs Europe’s largest operating wind turbine at Gvozd wind farm

Montenegrin state-owned power utility EPCG has successfully installed what it claims is the largest wind turbine currently operating in Europe, underscoring Montenegro’s ambition to not only follow European energy trends but actively shape them. The Gvozd wind farm serves as a flagship project for this vision. The first 7 MW turbine, featuring a 120-meter tower

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

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

ESG is not an add-on: Why social licence, biodiversity and transparency now shape Serbian RES investments Read More »

ESG is not an add-on: Why social licence, biodiversity and transparency now shape Serbian RES investments

For many years, renewable energy in Serbia was framed primarily as a technical and financial endeavour. Developers focused on permits, engineering, EPC contracts, grid connection and financing. What happened outside this core—community engagement, biodiversity protection, transparency, environmental governance—was often treated as secondary. But the landscape has shifted decisively. ESG is no longer an optional layer

Financing the transition: How lenders, ECAs and DFIs evaluate Serbian RES projects Read More »

Financing the transition: How lenders, ECAs and DFIs evaluate Serbian RES projects

The last five years have quietly reshaped the financial architecture of Serbia’s renewable-energy sector. What was once a landscape of cautious local banks and a handful of foreign investors has evolved into a structured, multilayered financing environment where commercial banks, export credit agencies, development finance institutions and international investors play increasingly sophisticated roles. Serbia’s transition

The Balkan permitting gauntlet: Why renewable projects in Serbia still struggle with development risk Read More »

The Balkan permitting gauntlet: Why renewable projects in Serbia still struggle with development risk

Every renewable developer who has worked in Serbia understands a basic truth about the market: the hardest part of building a solar or wind project is not raising capital or installing equipment. It is surviving the permitting gauntlet. This gauntlet is not unique to Serbia; every emerging renewable market carries layers of administrative, spatial, environmental

Behind the kilowatts: The real economics of developing wind and solar in Serbia Read More »

Behind the kilowatts: The real economics of developing wind and solar in Serbia

Renewable energy development in Serbia has reached a stage where enthusiasm alone is no longer enough. Investors who once believed that solar could be built simply by acquiring land and signing EPC contracts have learned that the economics of development are far more complex. Wind developers who assumed that early resource assessments guaranteed long-term bankability

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