The split inside Serbia’s energy sector in 2025 was not just qualitative; it was measurable in revenues, margins, cash generation and balance-sheet behaviour. Oil...
Serbia’s electricity sector in 2025 is no longer an engineering monopoly environment where outcomes are predetermined by state planning and fixed price models. It...
Experts have been brutally honest: Serbia remains structurally dependent on gas arrangements shaped by geopolitical vulnerability. This is not simply an energy issue. It...
For most of Serbia’s post-transition period, electricity policy and export policy lived in separate institutional worlds. Electricity was treated as infrastructure — a background...
Energy-sector uncertainty is beginning to surface not only as a cost issue, but as a liquidity challenge for Serbian companies. Delays in payments, fluctuating...
Europe’s industrial landscape is undergoing a fundamental transformation: decarbonisation is no longer a voluntary exercise, and renewable electricity sourcing has become a procurement prerequisite....
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...
Serbia’s state energy company, EPS, enters 2026 under conditions that are no longer temporary disturbances but structural failures. Electricity imports are climbing again, especially...
Securing a reliable grid connection is fundamental to monetizing wind‑park output. Transmission constraints or curtailment policies can limit the ability to export electricity, eroding...
From an Owner’s Engineer’s vantage point, Southeast Europe’s onshore wind market is entering a defining phase—where investor capital, construction excellence, and policy reliability must...
Investing in a wind park is fundamentally about converting a natural resource into predictable cash flows. In Southeast Europe, supportive policy frameworks and the...
At the heart of Serbia’s gas vulnerability lies a simple structural fact: the country does not have enough storage to survive prolonged supply shocks...
Serbia’s mandatory oil and fuel reserves are stored both within the country and abroad (through “tickets”), according to the Ministry of Mining and Energy,...
Serbia’s energy sector stands at a turning point: squeezed between decarbonisation pressures, the slow decline of lignite, rising demand, regional competition, and the shift...