electricity market

Serbia becomes first non-EU country to align electricity market with EU standards

Serbia has emerged as a leader in energy market integration among Energy Community members, becoming the first non-EU country to meet the technical and legal requirements for linking its electricity market with the European Union. Serbian Minister of Energy and Mining, Dubravka Djedovic, stated that Serbia has completed the full harmonization of its electricity legislation […]

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SEE’s electricity market: Structure, competition, traders, strategies and the next decade of transformation

The South-East European electricity market has always stood apart from the mature, deeply liquid and algorithmically saturated markets of Western and Northern Europe. The Western Balkans region—extending through Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia, Albania, and partially linked surrounding systems—remains a puzzle of semi-liberalised markets, legacy monopolies, variable regulatory maturity, rapid renewable expansion potential

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SEE’s electricity market: Traders, cross-border power, structural dynamics and the emerging hierarchy of the next decade

South-East Europe remains one of the most complex, strategically contested and structurally unique electricity markets on the continent. The region is not fully liberalised, not fully integrated, and not yet governed by the deep liquidity and institutional discipline of Western European hubs. It is a system still influenced by political decisions, hydro variability, ageing coal

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Understanding how the European electricity market works: Liberalization, pricing and integration

An electricity market is an organized system where various participants—such as power generators, retailers, and large consumers—buy and sell electrical energy. Unlike most other goods, electricity cannot be stored easily in large quantities, meaning it must be generated and consumed simultaneously. This characteristic makes managing the electricity market more complex and gives it unique features.

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Bosnia and Herzegovina takes key step toward EU energy market integration with new electricity law

President of the Bosnia and Herzegovina CIGRE Committee, Zijad Bajramović, has described the recent adoption of the law on the regulator, transmission, and electricity market as a crucial milestone in the country’s alignment with the European Union’s integrated energy market. The new legislation marks progress in fulfilling Bosnia and Herzegovina’s international obligations, establishing a framework

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Bosnia and Herzegovina: Entities reach agreement on new electricity market law

The entities of Bosnia and Herzegovina have agreed on the text of a new law that will regulate the country’s electricity market. Along with legislation concerning the electricity regulator and transmission system, the new law lays the groundwork for establishing a Bosnian power exchange, which will be based in Mostar. This development marks a major

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Montenegro targets full integration with European electricity market by 2037

Montenegro is on track to begin its digital integration with the unified European electricity market between late 2026 and early 2027, with full integration anticipated by the end of 2036 or early 2037, according to Ivan Bulatović, CEO of state-owned power utility EPCG. This step marks a major transformation for Montenegro’s energy sector, paving the

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