The year Serbia learned to trade power like a market economy – and what it really means for investors, EPS, and the regional electricity map Read More »

The year Serbia learned to trade power like a market economy – and what it really means for investors, EPS, and the regional electricity map

Serbia’s electricity sector in 2025 is no longer a simple utility story. It has become a trading story, a margin story, a volatility story, and ultimately a capital allocation story. This is the year when Serbia stopped pretending that electricity is merely a domestic public service shielded from international dynamics and fully entered the economic […]

At the edge of the hydrogen era: Serbia between strategic promise and regulatory reality Read More »

At the edge of the hydrogen era: Serbia between strategic promise and regulatory reality

Across Europe, the green hydrogen transition is no longer a distant concept but a clear strategic pathway for decarbonising energy systems, heavy industry and transport. Germany’s energy transition strategy explicitly recognises that long-term climate neutrality will rely on imported renewable hydrogen and its derivatives. The European Union has already built a regulatory and policy architecture

Between Moscow, Brussels and the barrel: Serbia’s oil politics laid bare Read More »

Between Moscow, Brussels and the barrel: Serbia’s oil politics laid bare

Serbia’s oil sector in 2025 lives inside one of the most geopolitically sensitive energy architectures in Europe. Unlike electricity, which Serbia partially controls through domestic generation, or gas, which is structurally and visibly linked to pipeline geopolitics, oil exists in a quieter but more complex zone: a place where the ownership of core national infrastructure

Oil as quiet leverage: Why Serbia’s refining system is both a national security pillar and a financial anchor investors must grasp Read More »

Oil as quiet leverage: Why Serbia’s refining system is both a national security pillar and a financial anchor investors must grasp

In Serbia’s energy debate, electricity usually absorbs attention. Gas dominates geopolitical discourse. Oil, meanwhile, runs the country quietly, relentlessly, with far greater financial significance than public conversation implies. In 2025, oil in Serbia is not simply a commodity. It is an economic baseline, a macro-stability factor, a logistics enabler, a fiscal policy influencer and, most

Between flows and power: How Serbia’s 2025 gas reality navigates dependence, negotiation and a shifting energy map Read More »

Between flows and power: How Serbia’s 2025 gas reality navigates dependence, negotiation and a shifting energy map

Natural gas occupies a very particular place in Serbia’s 2025 energy story. It is neither as emotionally charged as electricity, nor as geopolitically visible to the public as oil. Yet gas quietly underpins a significant portion of Serbia’s industrial capacity, urban heating stability, energy security narrative, and regional strategic positioning. In a world reshaped by

Beyond supply and sanctions: How Serbia’s 2025 oil predicament lays bare reliance, bargaining power and the hidden politics of energy Read More »

Beyond supply and sanctions: How Serbia’s 2025 oil predicament lays bare reliance, bargaining power and the hidden politics of energy

Oil rarely dominates Serbia’s public debate in the way electricity does. Power outages, hydropower droughts, EPS controversies and regional electricity prices tend to attract louder attention. Yet oil quietly sits at the core of Serbia’s economic security, industrial continuity and transport reality. In 2025, the story of oil in Serbia is less dramatic on the

Oil in Southeast Europe 2025–2026: Refining power, import dependence and the realities of industrial exposure Read More »

Oil in Southeast Europe 2025–2026: Refining power, import dependence and the realities of industrial exposure

Oil occupies a profoundly different strategic place in Southeast Europe’s economic architecture compared with gas or electricity. Where electricity represents future orientation and gas represents security vulnerability, oil represents continuity. It remains the backbone of transport, logistics, petrochemicals, heavy industry and mobility. It fuels economic circulation, maintains industrial lifelines, shapes price stability and directly influences

Gas in SEE 2025–2026: Security, price, infrastructure and the battle for industrial survival Read More »

Gas in SEE 2025–2026: Security, price, infrastructure and the battle for industrial survival

Natural gas has become one of the decisive strategic determinants of Southeast Europe’s economic, industrial and geopolitical identity. Where electricity is increasingly shaped by transition policy and structural market design, natural gas remains a more immediate, volatile and existential variable. It defines heating resilience, shapes industrial production costs, underpins power generation in several markets, influences

SEE’s electricity reality 2025–2026: Caveats, structural risks and the future of industrial competitiveness Read More »

SEE’s electricity reality 2025–2026: Caveats, structural risks and the future of industrial competitiveness

Electricity pricing in Southeast Europe has never been a simple technical matter, but in 2025 and 2026 it becomes something much larger: a decisive determinant of whether the region industrialises successfully, remains marginal, or falls into a cycle where manufacturing retreats, competitiveness erodes, and opportunity dissipates. Beneath every national electricity tariff table lies a deeper

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