SEE

Cross-border capacities in SEE: Who has the advantage, how they use it and where structural geography creates winners

Cross-border capacity is the true currency of the South-East European electricity market. While power exchanges across the region are steadily developing, and while market coupling promises deeper integration and liquidity over time, the real competitive edge still rests with those players who understand the physical constraints of the network, who hold the strongest positions in […]

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SEE’s electricity market: Traders, cross-border power, structural dynamics and the emerging hierarchy of the next decade

South-East Europe remains one of the most complex, strategically contested and structurally unique electricity markets on the continent. The region is not fully liberalised, not fully integrated, and not yet governed by the deep liquidity and institutional discipline of Western European hubs. It is a system still influenced by political decisions, hydro variability, ageing coal

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KEY 2026: Rimini prepares to open a new chapter in Europe’s energy transition

As KEY – The Energy Transition Expo returns to Rimini from 4–6 March 2026, the event is poised to capture a decisive moment for Europe’s renewable-energy landscape. What once revolved around long-term targets and conceptual debates is now shifting toward concrete execution, commercially proven technologies and scalable business models. Judging by the announcements from exhibitors,

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Using coal fundamentals in short-term spread strategies in SEE power markets

A trader’s guide to converting lignite production signals into actionable price intelligence Short-term electricity trading in South-East Europe revolves around two fundamental realities: the physical nature of the grid and the behaviour of the generating fleet. Among all conventional technologies, coal remains the single most structurally influential asset class across the region. Its importance is

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Coal-fired power plants in SEE – baseload influence, outages, market effects, cross-border trading, lifespan, coal output, quality and environmental costs

Coal-fired power plants remain central to the electricity systems of South-East Europe, particularly in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Romania and Bulgaria. These units were built in an era when baseload stability mattered more than flexibility, when domestic lignite was cheap and abundant, and when environmental duties were minimal. They still produce a large share

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Spread markets take hold in SEE: Industrial buyers embrace dynamic hedging as gas diversification accelerates

Southeast Europe is entering a new gas era defined not by rigid pipeline contracts, but by the gradual emergence of spread-driven markets, optionality, regas access and cross-border arbitrage. For decades, industrial procurement in Serbia, Croatia, Bulgaria, North Macedonia and Greece operated under a single structural assumption: Russian pipeline gas was the base-load molecule, delivered in

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Algorithmic trading probabilities for SEE zones: Forecasting volatility, spread formation and structural patterns in the Balkan power markets

South-East Europe has become one of the most algorithmically interesting electricity markets in Europe. Not because it is stable, liquid or deeply coupled — but because it is not. The region generates repeating patterns of volatility born not from random noise but from structural constraints. For algorithmic traders, this makes SEE one of the rare

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Market manipulation risks and structural arbitrage in South-East Europe’s electricity markets

South-East Europe has become one of the most volatile, opaque and structurally fragile electricity regions in Europe. The dysfunction is visible every day on platforms like electricity.trade, where spreads behave less like reflections of economic fundamentals and more like symptoms of a system susceptible to manipulation and structural arbitrage. This is not due merely to

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A trader’s guide to interpreting SEE spreads operationally: The real mechanics behind price divergence

Understanding South-East European electricity spreads requires abandoning the classical frameworks used in Western Europe and adopting a system-behavioural perspective. SEE is not a price zone arrangement. It is a network of bottlenecks, delays, surpluses, deficits, hydro modulation, balancing scarcity, renewable surges, and political infrastructure inertia. Spreads are the language the grid uses to express stress.

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How traders read South-East Europe: spreads, volatility pockets and the new physics of electricity trading

Electricity trading in South-East Europe has shifted from a predictable peripheral activity into one of the most volatile and complex segments of the European power market. The region that once moved in the shadow of Central Europe now generates some of the most dramatic intraday swings, deepest cross-border spreads and sharpest structural divergences visible on

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