serbia

What the European gas market means for Serbia-based producers and exporters

The European natural gas market has moved decisively away from its pre-2020 equilibrium. Price formation, supply security, and cost competitiveness are no longer primarily dictated by long-term contracts and pipeline marginal costs. Instead, they are shaped by a volatile interplay of LNG pricing, financial hedging, regulatory overlays, and gas-power coupling. For Serbia-based companies producing gas, […]

What the European gas market means for Serbia-based producers and exporters Read More »

Oil market prices, cost trends and export economics for Serbian producers targeting the EU market

By 2030, Serbian exporters will no longer focus on whether global oil prices are “high” or “low,” but on whether delivered cost structures remain competitive once energy, carbon, logistics, and compliance are fully incorporated into EU-bound exports. Serbia does not compete as an upstream crude producer; it competes as a downstream processor, producing petroleum products,

Oil market prices, cost trends and export economics for Serbian producers targeting the EU market Read More »

Region: Serbia–North Macedonia gas pipeline project set for completion by 2027

Plans for a new gas pipeline connecting Serbia and North Macedonia are moving forward with a defined timeline, as permitting is expected to conclude by mid-2026, followed immediately by construction. The update came after talks between Serbian Minister of Mining and Energy Dubravka Đedović and her North Macedonian counterpart Sanja Božinovska. Serbia’s energy strategy has

Region: Serbia–North Macedonia gas pipeline project set for completion by 2027 Read More »

Industry, electricity and the carbon clock: Serbia’s race to secure green power before CBAM reshapes the market

Europe’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) has introduced a new dimension of industrial competitiveness: the carbon clock. Every year that passes without decarbonisation increases the cost burden for exporters selling into the European Union. For Serbia, whose manufacturing base is heavily reliant on electricity-intensive processes, CBAM represents both a challenge and an opportunity. The challenge

Industry, electricity and the carbon clock: Serbia’s race to secure green power before CBAM reshapes the market Read More »

Serbia 2030: A manufacturing hub powered by wind, solar and engineering talent — or an energy-expensive periphery?

By 2030, Serbia will be defined by the decisions it makes today about electricity, industrial policy and renewable energy. Two futures exist in parallel. In the first, Serbia becomes the leading nearshore manufacturing hub for Central and Western Europe, powered by renewable electricity, robust engineering talent and advanced fabrication capabilities. In the second, Serbia fails

Serbia 2030: A manufacturing hub powered by wind, solar and engineering talent — or an energy-expensive periphery? Read More »

The Green Megawatt Strategy: How Serbia can turn renewable energy into its strongest nearshoring advantage

The global industrial landscape is reorganising around energy. For decades, labour cost and geographic proximity were the core determinants of manufacturing location. Today, green electricity—its price, availability and carbon profile—has emerged as the most important variable in European industrial planning. Serbia stands at a unique intersection: it possesses competitive labour, strong engineering capability and geographic

The Green Megawatt Strategy: How Serbia can turn renewable energy into its strongest nearshoring advantage Read More »

Europe’s new industrial equation: labour, engineering, green electricity — can Serbia achieve all three?

Europe’s industrial model is shifting toward a new competitive equation. The old formula—low-cost labour plus manufacturing scale—is being replaced by a triad: labour × engineering × green electricity. Countries capable of delivering all three will dominate the industrial landscape of the next decade. Serbia is one of the few near-EU economies positioned to combine these factors,

Europe’s new industrial equation: labour, engineering, green electricity — can Serbia achieve all three? Read More »

The industrial PPA revolution: Will long-term wind and solar contracts become mandatory for Serbia’s exporters by 2030?

Europe’s industrial landscape is undergoing a fundamental transformation: decarbonisation is no longer a voluntary exercise, and renewable electricity sourcing has become a procurement prerequisite. Serbia, as a major nearshoring destination, must align with this shift. As serbia-business.eu and serbia-energy.eu both highlight, European manufacturers increasingly require their suppliers to prove renewable electricity usage through long-term PPAs (Power Purchase Agreements) or

The industrial PPA revolution: Will long-term wind and solar contracts become mandatory for Serbia’s exporters by 2030? Read More »

From HUPX to SEEPEX: What power-exchange volatility means for Serbia’s exporters

Serbia’s export economy is increasingly shaped by electricity dynamics extending far beyond its borders. Manufacturers competing across Europe do not operate in an isolated energy ecosystem—they are directly exposed to the volatility of neighboring power exchanges such as Hungary’s HUPX, Romania’s OPCOM, Bulgaria’s IBEX, Greece’s ADEX and, of course, Serbia’s SEEPEX. The interplay between these

From HUPX to SEEPEX: What power-exchange volatility means for Serbia’s exporters Read More »

How SEE electricity spreads shape Serbia’s industrial margins: A 2026–2030 competitiveness map

Serbia’s industrial competitiveness is increasingly shaped not by domestic conditions alone but by regional electricity spreads across Southeast Europe. The price difference between Hungary’s HUPX, Romania’s OPCOM, Bulgaria’s IBEX, Greece’s ADEX and Serbia’s SEEPEX sets the backdrop against which Serbian exporters operate. These spreads influence cross-border flows, industrial tariffs, PPA affordability and the financial feasibility

How SEE electricity spreads shape Serbia’s industrial margins: A 2026–2030 competitiveness map Read More »

Scroll to Top