electricity

Croatia: Renewables take the lead as wind solar and biomass surpass hydropower in 2025

Croatia reached new milestones in renewable electricity generation in 2025, signaling a structural shift in the country’s electricity system. Provisional data shows that wind farms, solar power plants, and renewable-fuel thermal units collectively became the largest source of electricity for the first time. These technologies together produced over 5 TWh of electricity during the year, […]

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Bulgaria: AES Galabovo boosts output by 36%, supplies 7% of electricity in 2024

AES Bulgaria reported that its coal-fired thermal power plant, AES Galabovo, generated 2.62 million MWh of electricity in 2024, marking a 35.8% increase compared to the previous year’s 1.93 million MWh. The company stated that TPP Galabovo supplied around 7% of Bulgaria’s electricity consumption last year. In December alone, the power plant produced 256,000 MWh,

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Renewable electricity producers in Southeast Europe in 2025: Operating performance, pricing power and cash-flow reality

Across Southeast Europe, 2025 has marked the first full year in which renewable electricity producers have operated not as a protected transition segment, but as core contributors to regional power systems and wholesale price formation. Wind, solar and hydro assets are no longer marginal add-ons; they are now shaping intraday price curves, cross-border flows and balance-of-system economics.

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Serbia’s corporate PPA landscape in 2025: Structural barriers in a regional context

By 2025, corporate power purchase agreements in Serbia moved from theoretical relevance to practical necessity, but along a trajectory that differs materially from the rest of Southeast Europe. While Romania, Greece and Bulgaria entered the PPA phase through surplus renewable capacity and price cannibalisation, Serbia entered it through scarcity, volatility and structural exposure to fossil-linked pricing.

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Serbia’s industrial electricity price in 2025 versus neighbouring countries: A heavy-industry benchmark based on delivered cost, risk and market structure

By 2025, electricity pricing for heavy industry in South-East Europe had stopped being a question of headline wholesale averages and had become a question of delivered cost under risk. Across Serbia and its neighbouring countries, the decisive variables for steel mills, copper smelters, cement kilns, fertiliser plants, chemical producers and large food processors were no

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Who actually dominates which corridor In South-East Europe: Trader geography, time blocks and local market power

Once exchange liquidity and cross-border capacity are understood, the decisive question in South-East Europe becomes operational rather than theoretical: who controls flows at the margin, on which borders, and during which hours. The answer is not uniform across the region. Dominance shifts by corridor, by time block, and by whether a market is deep enough

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Power exchanges in South-East Europe In 2026: Liquidity hierarchies, cross-border price transmission and what industry really pays

By early 2026, South-East Europe’s electricity market is no longer best understood through national supply–demand balances alone. The decisive variable has become where liquidity concentrates, how effectively it travels across borders, and how deeply intraday markets absorb volatility. Power exchanges in SEE are no longer merely trading venues; they are price transmission engines whose depth,

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Regional power traders in South-East Europe in 2026: Influence maps, border dominance and a quantified industrial cost model

South-East Europe’s power market is often described through exchanges and interconnectors, but the day-to-day reality is that liquidity is delivered by trading houses. They determine whether price spreads close quickly or persist for hours, whether intraday volatility becomes an opportunity or a penalty, and whether industrial buyers are offered tight index-based supply or contracts loaded

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Cross-border electricity flows in South-East Europe in 2026: Congestion, arbitrage and the real price of geography

Cross-border electricity flows are the hidden engine of price formation in South-East Europe. While power exchanges provide the visible price signal, it is interconnector availability, congestion patterns and directional flow economics that determine whether those prices converge or fragment. By early 2026, SEE no longer behaves as a collection of isolated national markets, but neither

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Electricity trading in South-East Europe in January 2026: Volumes recover, export hubs dominate, traders monetise volatility

January 2026 confirmed that South-East Europe’s electricity markets have entered a structurally different phase from the crisis years of 2022–2024. Prices remained elevated by historical standards, but the defining change was the return of tradable liquidity. Volumes increased, cross-border flows intensified, and professional trading activity reasserted itself across organised exchanges and interconnector corridors. The region

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