Oil traders, pricing mechanisms and the future of Serbia’s downstream sector: A strategic spin-off analysis

Oil markets in Southeast Europe have always functioned at the intersection of global price signals and highly localised political risks. Serbia’s downstream system is an excellent example of how traders, refiners, wholesale distributors and retailers operate in an environment shaped more by route availability and ownership structures than by classical market competition. As the region […]

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The Balkan grid at a turning point: How cross-border capacities shape the winter 2025–26 electricity market

As winter settles across South-East Europe, the region’s electricity landscape enters a season shaped not by crisis but by structural interdependence. December 2025 finds the Balkan and Central-European power systems operating under a degree of cross-border coordination once unimaginable. The frantic volatility of 2022 has faded into the background; in its place stands a calmer

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The Balkan power mosaic: December 2025 prices and the regional outlook for Q1 2026

The final month of 2025 finds the electricity markets of South-East Europe entering winter with a stability few would have predicted even two years ago. The whip-saw volatility of the post-Ukraine crisis era has eased, gas is trading at multi-year lows, cross-border interconnections are stronger, and the Single Day-Ahead Coupling (SDAC) has compressed price spreads

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Winter markets at the periphery: How Montenegro, Croatia and Albania shape their place in the regional power price landscape

The western edge of the Balkan electricity system enters December 2025 with a familiar imbalance: structurally small power exchanges, modest liquidity, highly weather-sensitive production, and an almost total dependence on neighbouring hubs for price formation. Montenegro, Croatia and Albania sit outside the gravitational core created by HUPX, OPCOM, SEEPEX and IBEX, yet their winter price

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Winter prices without the crisis heat: December 2025 market dynamics and a forecast for Q1 2026

December 2025 opens the winter season in Central and South-East Europe with a familiar but very different energy landscape. The fears that once shaped the region’s winter outlook — tight gas balances, extreme price volatility, supply threats and fragile thermal fleets — have been replaced by a calmer, more technically governed market. The price signals

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Serbia’s energy dilemma: EPS faces a slow-burning crisis amid calls for accountability

For decades, Serbia’s national utility, Elektroprivreda Srbije (EPS), operated under the illusion of indestructibility. Its sprawling lignite mines, ageing thermal plants and hydropower dams formed the backbone of a system that appeared resistant to regional shocks, political storms and market fluctuation. Serbia was one of few European countries that could boast of electricity self-sufficiency, even

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Serbia’s energy future at stake in post-Russia gas power struggle

For more than two decades, Serbia’s political and economic stability rested on a simple, unwritten assumption: Russian gas would continue to flow, reliably, predictably and at preferential terms negotiated quietly between Belgrade and Moscow. The relationship was never merely commercial. It was geopolitical architecture disguised as commodity trade. Moscow guaranteed supply; Belgrade guaranteed loyalty —

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Sanctions on NIS trigger Serbia’s most severe financial stress test in a generation

When the United States expanded its sanctions targeting Russian energy interests, few policymakers in Belgrade initially grasped the magnitude of what was unfolding. On the surface, nothing had changed: Serbia’s biggest oil company, NIS, majority-owned by Gazprom Neft, continued operating its refinery in Pančevo, its trucks still supplied fuel stations across the country, and its

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The sanctioned asset: How U.S. pressure on NIS turns Serbia’s oil sector into a geopolitical prize

When Washington quietly tightened the sanctioning architecture targeting Russia’s energy interests, Belgrade began feeling tremors long before any official measure referenced Serbia. The country’s largest oil company, NIS, majority-owned by Gazprom Neft, found itself drawn into the gravitational field of a much broader confrontation. The pressure did not resemble the blunt embargoes of previous eras;

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Elnos Serbia to build network connection for Balkans’ largest wind farm

Elnos Serbia has signed a contract with Sinohydro Corporation Limited, a subsidiary of PowerChina, to participate in the construction of the Vetrozelena wind farm, poised to become the largest standalone wind installation in the Balkans. The project will have a total installed capacity of 300 MW, featuring 48 turbines rated at 6.25 MW each. Under

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