Seven wind power plant projects were reported, with quotas allocated for five. The largest quota was awarded to Crni Vrh Power d.o.o. for the Crni Vrh wind farm (91.5 MW). Other projects receiving significant quotas include Alibunar 1 (67.62 MW) and Alibunar 2 (49.98 MW), awarded to WindVision Windfarm A d.o.o. and WindVision Windfarm B d.o.o., respectively. The Matrix Power d.o.o. company was allocated a quota of 56 MW for the Bela Anta 2 wind farm, and the Jasikovo d.o.o. company received a quota of 34.9 MW for their wind power project of the same name.
For solar projects, 34 applications were submitted, with quotas granted to five. The largest quota was given to Solarina d.o.o. for their Solarina project (105 MW). Other allocations include Kobra Global d.o.o., which received a 7.5 MW quota for the Kobra solar power plant, and Brankov Solar d.o.o., awarded a 5.6 MW quota for the B2 Sunspot 2 project. Mona Green Energy d.o.o. secured a 5 MW quota for the construction of the Kučevo 2 solar power plant, while Vemi Biogas d.o.o. received 1.7 MW for their Vemi Sun 2 project.
The total allocated capacity for these projects is 645 MW, with 10 new wind and solar plants expected to be built. The competitive pricing for the projects is EUR 50.9 per megawatt-hour for solar and EUR 53.5 per megawatt-hour for wind, both significantly below the market level. Minister of Mining and Energy, Dubravka Đedović Handanović, emphasized that these prices suggest that the plants will not require subsidies and will instead generate additional profits for the state as long as market prices remain higher than the auctioned prices.
The total investment value of these projects is estimated at EUR 782 million, according to the Ministry of Mining and Energy.






