electricity

Greece: Electricity retail market shows stability with PPC maintaining lead

A recent assessment by energy regulator RAAEY indicates that Greece’s electricity retail market remained largely stable between May and October, with only modest shifts in supplier positions across customer categories and voltage levels. PPC slightly increased its dominance, reaching just over 72% of nationwide customers by October. This represents a small gain compared to late […]

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Bulgaria: Energy overview highlights rising electricity and mixed fuel trends in October 2025

According to the Bulgarian National Statistical Institute, electricity production in October 2025 increased by 8.1% compared to September, reaching 3,175 GWh, while electricity consumption rose even more sharply by 23.6%, amounting to 2,940 GWh. On an annual basis, production was up 9.3%, and consumption grew by 12.7% compared to October 2024. Natural gas consumption in

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South-East Europe’s next decade: Can the region finally move from vulnerability to real energy strength?

South-East Europe has spent most of the past three decades reacting to energy problems rather than shaping its own future. It has lived through power shortages, political dependency, pipeline crises, refinery uncertainties, hydrological shocks, volatile import bills, underinvestment, institutional hesitation and a constant feeling that stability was always one crisis away from disappearing. In 2025,

South-East Europe’s next decade: Can the region finally move from vulnerability to real energy strength? Read More »

The price of delay: What happens if Serbia and the region move too slowly on energy modernization

Energy sectors rarely collapse suddenly. They decay gradually. Systems do not break overnight; they weaken, absorb shocks, survive another season, and quietly accumulate structural fatigue until one day the cost of catching up is far greater than the cost of acting earlier. In 2025, this is the most important risk facing Serbia and much of

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Why regional integration, not isolation, will decide South-East Europe’s energy future — and Serbia’s place in it

For years, energy debates in South-East Europe were dominated by national narratives. Every country spoke about its sovereignty, its own generation plans, its own infrastructure, its own ability to “secure supply independently.” Reality has quietly dismantled those claims. In 2025, the most important lesson emerging from Europe’s shifting energy landscape is that no country in

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Serbia’s energy transition reality check: Ambition, infrastructure and the uncomfortable truth between narratives and what actually exists

In public debate, “energy transition” is often presented as inevitability wrapped in optimism: cleaner power, modern technologies, new industry opportunities, cheaper renewables, and a supposedly straightforward path from coal and dependency toward sustainability and independence. But in Serbia — and much of South-East Europe — transition is not a slogan, not a trend, and certainly

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Energy is geopolitics: How electricity, oil and gas shape Serbia’s position between East, West and its own economic reality

In South-East Europe, energy policy has never truly been about kilowatt-hours, barrels or cubic meters alone. It has always been about alignment, leverage, identity, security, credibility and survival. In 2025, that truth is clearer than ever. Serbia stands at the center of a shifting regional energy order, not by choice, but by geography and necessity.

Energy is geopolitics: How electricity, oil and gas shape Serbia’s position between East, West and its own economic reality Read More »

Can Serbia ever be a ‘permanent power exporter’ again — or has the market already answered that question?

For nearly two decades, Serbia carried a self-image that shaped politics, strategy and public psychology: the idea that it was a structurally self-sufficient electricity country, often even a net exporter, supposedly shielded from the fragility, price shocks and insecurity faced by others. This belief was not invented; it reflected a period when lignite production was

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How Balkan electricity markets are quietly integrating Serbia into Europe’s energy system — the financial truth investors must understand

Integration does not always arrive with declarations, treaties or ceremonial signatures. Sometimes it arrives silently, through price synchronization, liquidity convergence, infrastructure alignment, balance sheets and trading desks. That is exactly what is happening to Serbia in 2025. While politics still speaks in the language of sovereignty, neutrality, independence and national systems, the financial and operational

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Winners and losers of Serbia’s 2025 electricity market — who actually benefits when volatility becomes the business model

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 has evolved into a competitive financial ecosystem where winners and losers emerge not according to ideology, but according to balance sheet strength, trading competence, risk appetite and capacity to navigate volatility.

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