Regional power-flow shifts after the Pljevlja shutdown: Montenegro in a rewired Balkan energy landscape Read More »

Regional power-flow shifts after the Pljevlja shutdown: Montenegro in a rewired Balkan energy landscape

The shutdown of Pljevlja transforms Montenegro’s internal energy balance, but its implications extend beyond national borders. In the interconnected Balkan power system, every addition or removal of a major unit reshapes flows, congestion points, trade patterns and price correlations. Montenegro’s transition to a predominantly hydro-wind profile introduces a new dynamic into a region already balancing […]

Private wind producers in Montenegro: From peripheral players to system-defining actors Read More »

Private wind producers in Montenegro: From peripheral players to system-defining actors

Montenegro’s power system is undergoing a quiet reordering of influence. Where state hydro once dominated unchallenged and Pljevlja provided the stable backbone, private wind producers are emerging as system-defining actors. They are reshaping generation patterns, altering the economics of supply, influencing price formation and pushing Montenegro into deeper integration with regional markets. The first generation

Balancing costs in Montenegro’s post-coal power system Read More »

Balancing costs in Montenegro’s post-coal power system

As Montenegro steps into a future without Pljevlja’s coal-fired stability, the cost of balancing becomes the defining economic metric of its power system. Balancing is never a simple technicality; it is the financial manifestation of volatility. When wind ramps up quickly or collapses within minutes, when hydrology restrains reservoir operations, when cross-border flows tighten and

Montenegro’s power future: Transitioning from coal at Pljevlja to wind, hydro and import options Read More »

Montenegro’s power future: Transitioning from coal at Pljevlja to wind, hydro and import options

Montenegro finds itself at a key inflection point. The only coal-fired thermal power plant in the country, Yugoslav Thermal Power Plant Pljevlja (TPP Pljevlja), with an installed capacity of about 225 MW, has for decades been the backbone of domestic generation and is now scheduled for gradual shutdown. (OECD) Its decommissioning raises fundamental questions about

Electricity costs and Serbia’s industrial competitiveness 2026–2030 Read More »

Electricity costs and Serbia’s industrial competitiveness 2026–2030

A sector-by-sector cross-analysis of steel, fabrication, machinery, electronics and industrial IT Serbia’s rise as a near-EU industrial and engineering hub will be determined less by labour productivity, logistics efficiency or even engineering capacity, and far more by the economics of electricity. Between 2026 and 2030, the price, stability, carbon intensity and contractual structure of Serbia’s

Scenario-based 2030–2040 supply-chain outlook: electricity, logistics, SEE corridors and Europe’s processing competitiveness Read More »

Scenario-based 2030–2040 supply-chain outlook: electricity, logistics, SEE corridors and Europe’s processing competitiveness

Europe’s pursuit of strategic autonomy in raw materials, electrification metals and industrial processing capacity is entering a decade defined by volatile energy markets, shifting logistics routes, geopolitical fragmentation and competition for midstream value creation. ReSourceEU has marked Europe’s strategic intent, but the 2030–2040 horizon will determine whether Europe becomes a competitive processing region or remains

Full wind–solar–baseload system model for Serbia (2030 / 2040 outlook) Read More »

Full wind–solar–baseload system model for Serbia (2030 / 2040 outlook)

By 2030 Serbia’s electricity system enters a structural transition where the dominance of coal is eroded not only by environmental policy but by its growing incompatibility with high penetration of intermittent renewable generation. The system model that emerges during this decade is characterised by a widening operational gap: solar and wind increase their share of

Scenario-based narrative: Curtailment vs. storage buildout in Serbia’s renewable future Read More »

Scenario-based narrative: Curtailment vs. storage buildout in Serbia’s renewable future

The next decade in Serbia’s renewable transition can unfold along two sharply contrasted scenarios: one in which storage development fails to keep pace with renewable expansion, and another where storage becomes a central pillar of system operation. These two trajectories lead to fundamentally different outcomes for both investors and the national electricity system. In the

Wind and solar vs. baseload and balancing in Serbia: A system under tension Read More »

Wind and solar vs. baseload and balancing in Serbia: A system under tension

Serbia’s energy system is entering a structural contradiction: it is simultaneously adding large volumes of intermittent renewable generation while still relying on an ageing baseload fleet designed for a different century’s operating principles. The clash between wind and solar variability on one side and the inertia-heavy, slow-ramping baseload infrastructure on the other defines every technical,

Solar energy producers in Serbia: Baseload constraints, balancing exposure and the structural risks of grid access Read More »

Solar energy producers in Serbia: Baseload constraints, balancing exposure and the structural risks of grid access

Solar power in Serbia has entered a rapid expansion phase, propelled by a convergence of policy changes, investor appetite, rising regional electricity prices and the gradual shift away from coal. Yet the Serbian market, unlike the mature solar environments of Southern Europe, inherits a legacy system built for baseload operation, centralised dispatch and vertically integrated

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