electricity

Grid-connection and flexibility reform as the real catalyst of SEE marketintegration

Much of the debate around Southeast Europe (SEE) electricity market integration focuses on trading platforms and regulatory alignment. Yet the true catalyst lies elsewhere: grid connection rules and flexibility access. Without reform in these areas, convergence remains superficial, and volatility migrates rather than resolves. Across SEE, grid connection queues are long, opaque, and biased toward […]

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CEE–SEE cross-border capacity auction reversals and what traders should readfrom them

Recent reversals in cross-border capacity auction prices between Central and Southeast Europe have drawn close attention from market participants. Annual and monthly auction outcomes on corridors linking Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, Croatia, and Serbia are no longer moving in predictable directions. For SEE traders, these reversals are not anomalies; they are early warnings of deeper

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EU efforts to reduce electricity price discrepancies and why SEE spreads will notdisappear

The European Union’s renewed political focus on reducing electricity price discrepancies between member states is often framed as a corrective to market fragmentation. In Southeast Europe (SEE), however, this agenda requires caution. While average prices may converge over time, the structural drivers of volatility and spreads across Serbia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, and the Western

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European electricity import–export balances and the rising strategic role of Southeast Europe

Europe’s electricity trade balance is undergoing a quiet but profound transformation. Traditional exporters and importers are redefining their roles as renewable penetration, nuclear availability, and demand patterns shift. Within this reshuffling, Southeast Europe (SEE) is no longer a peripheral zone; it is becoming a structural balancing region, linking Central Europe, the Mediterranean, and the Western

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French power oversupply and how it reshapes electricity flows into Central and Southeast Europe

France’s current electricity oversupply, driven by the return of nuclear capacity and slower-than-expected domestic electrification, is often viewed as a Western European issue with limited impact on Southeast Europe (SEE). In reality, French price dynamics increasingly ripple eastward, reshaping spreads, flow directions, and congestion patterns that directly affect Hungary, Croatia, Romania, and ultimately Serbia and

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Battery storage economics under EU market reform and spillover effects in SEE

Battery storage is emerging as one of the clearest winners of Europe’s evolving power market design. While attention often focuses on Germany, the Netherlands, or the UK, the spillover into Southeast Europe may be equally transformative, particularly for Hungary, Romania, Greece, and indirectly, Serbia and Bulgaria. The shift toward 15-minute settlement, combined with volatile renewable

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EU electricity market overhaul and its structural consequences for SEE priceconvergence

The European Union’s electricity market reforms are often framed as a response to price volatility and political pressure. For Southeast Europe (SEE), however, the reforms serve as a long-term convergence engine, gradually reshaping how Serbia, Bulgaria, Romania, Greece, and neighbouring markets align with the EU core. The question for the region is not whether convergence

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Europe’s shift to 15-minute electricity trading and what it changes for SEE power markets

Europe’s transition from hourly to 15-minute market time units is often presented as a technical reform designed to better reflect renewable generation. For Southeast Europe, however, the move represents something far more consequential: a structural change in how price signals, cross-border flows, and trading strategies form across Serbia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, and their neighbours.

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Qair Montenegro plans 60 MW Jabuka solar power plant as part of regional expansion

Qair Montenegro is preparing to develop a new solar power plant in the municipality of Niksic, with a planned installed capacity of 60 MW. The Montenegrin Government has granted the investor the necessary urban and technical conditions to move forward with the project. According to the approved documentation, the planned facility, named Jabuka, will be

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