electricity

Europe: Electricity prices show mixed trends in third week of January, driven by renewables and demand

During the third week of January, electricity prices in most major European markets showed an upward trend, although in many cases they remained below the levels seen in the first days of the previous week. As a result, weekly average prices in most markets fell compared to the prior week, with a few exceptions. The […]

Europe: Electricity prices show mixed trends in third week of January, driven by renewables and demand Read More »

Europe: Electricity demand shows mixed trends following epiphany holiday

During the week of January 12, electricity demand increased in most major European markets compared to the previous week. The Italian market recorded the largest rise, 6.8%, followed by a 5.0% increase in Spain. The Portuguese market showed the smallest growth, 1.7%, while Germany rose by 2.0%. Both the Italian and German markets marked their

Europe: Electricity demand shows mixed trends following epiphany holiday Read More »

Romania: Electricity and industrial output projected to grow gradually through 2029

Romania’s electricity and heat generation is expected to see a gradual increase in the coming years, with modest growth projected for 2026 and steady gains extending through 2029, according to the autumn edition of the National Strategy and Forecast Commission’s outlook for 2025–2029. The Commission forecasts that energy production and supply will rise by 0.8%

Romania: Electricity and industrial output projected to grow gradually through 2029 Read More »

Bulgaria: Power output falls as consumption rises, boosting imports in early 2026

According to data published by Bulgaria’s electricity transmission system operator ESO, electricity production in Bulgaria declined by 2.45% year-on-year in the period from 1 January to 18 January 2026, reaching a total of 2.37 TWh. Over the same period, electricity consumption increased by 4.18%, amounting to 2.52 TWh, resulting in net electricity imports of 156

Bulgaria: Power output falls as consumption rises, boosting imports in early 2026 Read More »

Romania: Electricity consumption slightly down in 2025 amid strong solar growth and rising trade

According to data from the National Institute for Statistics (INS), Romania’s electricity consumption in the first eleven months of 2025 totaled 45.65 TWh, down 0.7% compared with the same period in 2024. Industrial consumption reached 34.54 TWh, a 1.1% decrease, while household consumption increased slightly by 0.4%, reaching 10.77 TWh. Public lighting use fell by

Romania: Electricity consumption slightly down in 2025 amid strong solar growth and rising trade Read More »

Europe: EU renewables near half of power demand as 2024 marks a structural energy shift

Renewable energy continued to gain ground across the European Union in 2024, with green sources supplying just under half of all electricity consumed. According to the latest Eurostat data, renewables covered 47.5% of gross electricity demand, a clear increase from the previous year that underscores a long-term structural shift in the EU’s energy system. This

Europe: EU renewables near half of power demand as 2024 marks a structural energy shift Read More »

Is EPS lagging behind regional power utilities? Execution, not ambition, is the core gap

When measured against its regional peers, Elektroprivreda Srbije (EPS) is increasingly lagging—not in stated ambition, but in execution speed, project scale, and repeatable delivery capacity. The contrast is clearest in renewables, flexibility, and grid-linked investments, where neighbouring utilities have moved from planning into multi-year construction cycles, while EPS is only beginning to transition from feasibility-heavy portfolios into first

Is EPS lagging behind regional power utilities? Execution, not ambition, is the core gap Read More »

Serbia: EPS’s €3.6 billion investment plan reflects reduced ambition and uncertain execution

Serbia’s state-owned power utility Elektroprivreda Srbije (EPS) has revised the scale of its much-publicised investment programme, clarifying that the planned capital envelope amounts to €3.6 billion over the next three years. While the figure is far more realistic in macroeconomic terms, the underlying issue remains unchanged: the gap between announced investment plans and visible execution on the

Serbia: EPS’s €3.6 billion investment plan reflects reduced ambition and uncertain execution Read More »

SEE thermal power and coal in 2026: A quantified forecast linked to hydro swings, CO₂ pricing, coal mining supply, and regional trading

Thermal power in South-East Europe in 2026 will not be determined by a single “coal versus renewables” narrative. It will be determined by how much hydropower the region actually receives, how high the CO₂ price floor sits across European-linked markets, how reliably coal mining can deliver lignite tonnage to power plants, and how much cross-border

SEE thermal power and coal in 2026: A quantified forecast linked to hydro swings, CO₂ pricing, coal mining supply, and regional trading Read More »

Serbia as a near-shore green manufacturing hub — what must change before 2030

Serbia still has a narrow but realistic window to position itself as a near-shore green manufacturing hub for EU supply chains. Geography, labour costs, industrial depth, and trade access are not the binding constraints. The binding constraint is energy credibility—specifically, whether Serbia can deliver reliable, scalable, and auditable green electricity to energy-intensive exporters under CBAM

Serbia as a near-shore green manufacturing hub — what must change before 2030 Read More »

Scroll to Top