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

Battery storage in Southeast Europe: Quantified capacity evolution, grid security logic, economic reality and deployment scenarios to 2035 Read More »

Battery storage in Southeast Europe: Quantified capacity evolution, grid security logic, economic reality and deployment scenarios to 2035

Battery energy storage systems have shifted from speculative conversation to structural necessity in Southeast Europe. The question is no longer whether battery storage will become central to the region’s electricity systems, but how quickly it will scale, how deeply it will influence price formation, how strongly it will reinforce supply security, and how it will

Ownership structure of renewable energy producers in South-East Europe in 2025: Who owns the transition and where the capital comes from Read More »

Ownership structure of renewable energy producers in South-East Europe in 2025: Who owns the transition and where the capital comes from

By 2025 renewable energy in South-East Europe is no longer primarily a state-utility story. Hydropower built before 1990 still sits largely in public ownership across the region, but almost every meaningful megawatt of wind and solar installed in the last decade belongs to private investors, international utilities, infrastructure funds, development banks and increasingly Gulf sovereign-linked

Oil markets in South-East Europe in 2025: Production, import reliance, refining capacity, trading volumes and price dynamics Read More »

Oil markets in South-East Europe in 2025: Production, import reliance, refining capacity, trading volumes and price dynamics

By 2025 oil continues to shape key parts of South-East Europe’s energy and economic landscape. It remains critical for transport fuels, industrial feedstocks, backup power generation in price spikes and inflation dynamics. Unlike electricity and gas, oil systems in the region are almost entirely net import dependent, but the presence or absence of refining capacity,

Natural gas trading in South-East Europe in 2025: Supply routes, import dependence, pricing realities and strategic exposure Read More »

Natural gas trading in South-East Europe in 2025: Supply routes, import dependence, pricing realities and strategic exposure

By 2025 natural gas in South-East Europe is no longer only an energy commodity; it is a strategic risk variable, a price-setter for electricity in critical hours and a geopolitical transmission channel embedded directly in national economic stability. The region has diversified infrastructure, LNG access, interconnectors and reverse-flow capability far more than before 2022, yet

Nuclear power in SEE in 2025: Capacity, production realities and its stabilising role in the regional energy system Read More »

Nuclear power in SEE in 2025: Capacity, production realities and its stabilising role in the regional energy system

In 2025 nuclear energy remains the single most reliable anchor of baseload stability in South-East Europe. While solar and wind are rapidly reshaping the regional power profile, nuclear is what quietly keeps frequency stable, dampens volatility, underpins export surpluses in key systems and protects national balances from fuel price shocks. It is not expanding everywhere,

Wind power in South-East Europe in 2025: Generation trends, system impact and the new role in regional energy stability Read More »

Wind power in South-East Europe in 2025: Generation trends, system impact and the new role in regional energy stability

By 2025 wind power has become the quiet stabiliser of the South-East European electricity system. Unlike solar, which floods the grid in predictable daylight waves and collapses at sunset, wind delivers energy across the full 24-hour cycle, smooths residual demand, strengthens export capacity in key markets and materially reduces fuel and carbon exposure. It does

Solar as the new balancing power: How pv output in 2025 is reshaping energy saldos and flexibility economics in south-east europe Read More »

Solar as the new balancing power: How pv output in 2025 is reshaping energy saldos and flexibility economics in south-east europe

By 2025 solar photovoltaic generation has firmly graduated from niche to structural in the South-East European energy mix. Across the region, PV now produces measurable terawatt-hour volumes, depresses midday prices, reshapes import/export saldos and dramatically increases the need for balancing energy as grids adjust to steeper intraday swings. The story is not uniform by country,

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.

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