investment

HV/MV infrastructure: The unseen backbone of Serbia’s renewable build-out

The growth of renewable energy in Serbia is often narrated through visible symbols: turbine towers rising above agricultural fields, solar panels stretching across the landscape, cranes assembling nacelles, substations humming with new capacity. But the real story of Serbia’s energy transition is not written in these visible elements. It is written in the invisible backbone […]

HV/MV infrastructure: The unseen backbone of Serbia’s renewable build-out Read More »

Wind vs. solar: Serbia’s new competition for land, grid and investors

Serbia’s renewable-energy landscape was once simple. Wind dominated early development, driven by strong resource potential in Banat and a supportive feed-in tariff that attracted pioneers into the sector. Solar lagged behind for years, held back by policy uncertainty, licensing complexity and a perception that Serbia’s continental climate could not match the economics seen in southern

Wind vs. solar: Serbia’s new competition for land, grid and investors Read More »

Local content, global standards: What international developers expect from Serbian contractors

As Serbia’s renewable-energy market expands, a new dynamic has begun to define the sector: the interaction between international developers and Serbian contractors. This relationship sits at the heart of Serbia’s ability to scale wind and solar capacity efficiently, safely and in line with the expectations of global investors. International developers bring capital, technology, procurement networks

Local content, global standards: What international developers expect from Serbian contractors Read More »

The rise of green lending: How banks are rewriting credit policy for Serbia’s renewable sector

The renewable-energy shift in Serbia has brought a quiet but profound transformation inside the country’s financial sector. Only a decade ago, local banks viewed renewable projects with a blend of curiosity and caution. The technology felt unfamiliar, the regulatory landscape was unstable, and long-term revenue structures were difficult to predict. Today the situation has reversed.

The rise of green lending: How banks are rewriting credit policy for Serbia’s renewable sector Read More »

ESG is not an add-on: Why social licence, biodiversity and transparency now shape Serbian RES investments

For many years, renewable energy in Serbia was framed primarily as a technical and financial endeavour. Developers focused on permits, engineering, EPC contracts, grid connection and financing. What happened outside this core—community engagement, biodiversity protection, transparency, environmental governance—was often treated as secondary. But the landscape has shifted decisively. ESG is no longer an optional layer

ESG is not an add-on: Why social licence, biodiversity and transparency now shape Serbian RES investments Read More »

Romania: Black Sea Oil & Gas launches new biogas business 

Black Sea Oil & Gas SA (BSOG) and its shareholders, global investment firm Carlyle and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) announce that it has launched BSOG Energy SRL, a new company focused on developing biogas production plants across Romania. Headquartered in Bucharest, Romania, BSOG Energy will develop biogas plants across Romania with

Romania: Black Sea Oil & Gas launches new biogas business  Read More »

Western Balkans: Alcazar receives 490 million USD to finance renewables

Luxembourg infrastructure fund Alcazar Energy Partners II has reached a final closing of US$490 million after successfully acquiring the project rights for its first two wind farms in the Western Balkans, totaling 456 MW. Since first closing in November 2022, the fund has attracted eight additional investors, including the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC).

Western Balkans: Alcazar receives 490 million USD to finance renewables Read More »

Romania: Romgaz prepares 1.5-billion-euro MTN scheme to finance Neptun Deep project

Romania’s natural gas company, with Rothschild Bank as its adviser, hired JP Morgan to lead the consortium of banks that will intermediate the sale of bonds on the foreign market under an MTN scheme aimed to finance the Black Sea gas project, Neptun Deep, local media reported. The MTN scheme would reportedly have a size

Romania: Romgaz prepares 1.5-billion-euro MTN scheme to finance Neptun Deep project Read More »

Scroll to Top