serbia

Can Serbia build the Balkans’ first green industrial corridor? Fabrication clusters powered by wind and solar PPAs

The next great competitive frontier for Serbia is not only in factory floors or engineering centres, but in the creation of a renewable-powered industrial corridor stretching across the country’s most strategically positioned manufacturing zones. Serbia stands at a pivotal point: its fabrication and machinery sectors are increasingly integrated into European supply chains, yet they face […]

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The fabrication sector’s hidden risk: How rising electricity prices threaten Serbia’s biggest export engine

Fabrication is widely recognised as one of Serbia’s most dynamic export engines, yet its vulnerability to rising electricity costs is often underestimated. Welded assemblies, steel frames, CNC-machined parts, pipe systems, pressure components and large industrial modules form the backbone of Serbia’s industrial supply chain. These products are shipped daily to Germany, Austria, the Netherlands and

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Metallurgy under pressure: Why green hydrogen, not scrap prices, will determine competitiveness by 2030

The global steel and metallurgy industries have long viewed scrap availability and commodity pricing as the primary indicators of competitiveness. But the next decade marks a structural pivot. For metallurgy in Serbia, the decisive factors will no longer be scrap quality or input metal costs—they will be electricity pricing, green hydrogen access and carbon compliance

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The €/MWh pathway to €10bn exports: How Serbia’s fabrication, electronics and machinery clusters depend on stable industrial energy

Serbia’s industrial expansion toward 2030 increasingly reflects a simple equation: export growth follows the €/MWh curve. If electricity prices remain stable and competitive, Serbia’s fabrication, electronics and machinery sectors could collectively add more than €10bn to annual exports. If electricity costs rise unpredictably or decarbonisation efforts lag, these sectors may lose momentum precisely when EU

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Cheap labour no longer wins — cheap green electricity does: Why Serbia’s next competitive advantage depends on RES-based industrial zones

For decades, Serbia—and much of Eastern Europe—relied on competitive labour costs as the primary attractor of foreign direct investment. Manufacturing firms came for affordability, engineering talent and geographic proximity. But the global industrial model has shifted. Labour cost is no longer the primary differentiator. Today, the decisive factor shaping investment flows, export competitiveness and nearshoring

Cheap labour no longer wins — cheap green electricity does: Why Serbia’s next competitive advantage depends on RES-based industrial zones Read More »

Can Serbia remain Europe’s nearshore manufacturing base as energy costs rise? A competitive-index review for 2026–2030

Serbia’s nearshoring momentum over the last decade was built on a combination of geographic proximity, engineering talent, competitive labour costs and an industrial base capable of supplying Europe within 48 hours. But as Europe enters a phase of energy-driven industrial transformation, Serbia’s position as a preferred manufacturing platform is being tested by rising electricity costs,

Can Serbia remain Europe’s nearshore manufacturing base as energy costs rise? A competitive-index review for 2026–2030 Read More »

Serbia’s industrial future will be priced in megawatt-hours: How electricity costs decide which sectors grow and which collapse by 2030

Serbia’s industrial trajectory toward 2030 will be determined not by labour costs, factory automation levels or investor incentives alone, but increasingly by the cost, stability and carbon profile of electricity. As Europe restructures its entire supply chain architecture around green transition rules, CBAM obligations and resilience requirements, Serbia’s manufacturing map is being redrawn in megawatt-hours.

Serbia’s industrial future will be priced in megawatt-hours: How electricity costs decide which sectors grow and which collapse by 2030 Read More »

Electricity costs and Serbia’s industrial competitiveness 2026–2030

A sector-by-sector cross-analysis of steel, fabrication, machinery, electronics and industrial IT Serbia’s rise as a near-EU industrial and engineering hub will be determined less by labour productivity, logistics efficiency or even engineering capacity, and far more by the economics of electricity. Between 2026 and 2030, the price, stability, carbon intensity and contractual structure of Serbia’s

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Scenario-based 2030–2040 supply-chain outlook: electricity, logistics, SEE corridors and Europe’s processing competitiveness

Europe’s pursuit of strategic autonomy in raw materials, electrification metals and industrial processing capacity is entering a decade defined by volatile energy markets, shifting logistics routes, geopolitical fragmentation and competition for midstream value creation. ReSourceEU has marked Europe’s strategic intent, but the 2030–2040 horizon will determine whether Europe becomes a competitive processing region or remains

Scenario-based 2030–2040 supply-chain outlook: electricity, logistics, SEE corridors and Europe’s processing competitiveness Read More »

Full wind–solar–baseload system model for Serbia (2030 / 2040 outlook)

By 2030 Serbia’s electricity system enters a structural transition where the dominance of coal is eroded not only by environmental policy but by its growing incompatibility with high penetration of intermittent renewable generation. The system model that emerges during this decade is characterised by a widening operational gap: solar and wind increase their share of

Full wind–solar–baseload system model for Serbia (2030 / 2040 outlook) Read More »

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