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Renewable-energy manufacturing opportunities: Serbia’s role in Europe’s energy-transition supply chain

Europe’s energy transition is not only an energy-system transformation but a manufacturing one. The deployment of renewable generation, grids and storage requires an immense volume of fabricated components—many of them heavy, customised and sensitive to logistics costs. Serbia is increasingly positioned to capture this demand as a near-source manufacturing base for Europe’s energy-transition supply chain. […]

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The new economics of energy supply: How Serbian CFOs can use corporate PPAs to stabilise costs and strengthen ESG

For Serbian CFOs and procurement directors, the shift toward contracting electricity from private wind parks represents a structural change in how corporate energy strategy interacts with financial planning, risk control and long-term competitiveness. The era of annual tenders and one-dimensional price comparisons is fading. Renewables introduce a new architecture of exposure: production variability, balancing markets,

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Explainer: How Serbian industrial consumers should approach RES electricity from private wind parks

Serbia is entering a phase in which private wind parks, merchant RES investors, and licensed electricity suppliers are beginning to shape a parallel market next to EPS and the regulated supply environment. For industrial end-users, especially manufacturers, logistics hubs, refineries, chemical plants, data centres, mining and metallurgy, the next five years will bring a structural

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EPS and the Alibunar wind parks: The subtle but significant shift in Serbia’s energy transformation

When Elektroprivreda Srbije announced that it would offtake electricity from the Alibunar 1 and Alibunar 2 wind parks — a combined 168 megawatts of new renewable capacity — the statement appeared modest, almost procedural. Serbia has been adding wind capacity for nearly a decade, and private developers have taken the lead in most recent projects.

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Serbia’s renewable milestone: What 48% green electricity really means for the country’s energy future

Serbia closed the previous year with one of the most striking statistics in its recent energy history: 48 percent of all electricity generated came from renewable sources, according to government data. At first glance, the figure appears to position Serbia among Europe’s more advanced energy-transition performers, surpassing several EU members in renewable penetration. With hydropower providing

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Europe’s renewable energy update: Solar PV rebounds in Germany while wind patterns shift across the continent

In the week of December 1, solar photovoltaic (PV) energy production in the German market increased by 8.7% compared to the previous week. In contrast, the markets of Italy, France, and the Iberian Peninsula recorded declines for the second consecutive week. The Portuguese market experienced the largest drop at 33%, followed by a 27% decrease

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Insurance, force majeure and financial risk transfer — the new architecture of protection for wind investors in Southeast Europe

In the early stages of Southeast Europe’s renewable expansion, wind investors focused primarily on EPC contracts, turbine warranties, and revenue support mechanisms. Insurance was treated as a formal requirement—necessary for lenders, but rarely integrated into strategic project design. That era is over. Insurance and financial risk-transfer structures have now become core pillars of investor protection,

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ESG, community strategy and social license — the hidden financial drivers of wind success in Southeast Europe

For years, wind investment strategies in Southeast Europe focused almost exclusively on technical variables: resource quality, EPC pricing, grid access, and financing structure. But as markets mature, a new set of forces is emerging—less visible than capex or P50 curves, but increasingly decisive in determining which projects advance smoothly, which face costly delays, and which

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The grid-ready wind farm — engineering for congestion, curtailment and dynamic grid codes in Southeast Europe

A decade ago, the success of a wind farm in Southeast Europe was determined primarily by resource quality, EPC execution, and turbine reliability. Today, those factors remain essential—but they are no longer sufficient. The defining determinant of performance, bankability, and long-term value has shifted decisively toward grid readiness. Serbia, Romania, Croatia, and Montenegro are entering

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The coming consolidation — how M&A will reshape the wind market in Serbia, Romania, Croatia and Montenegro

Every renewable market evolves through phases. The first is exploration, where early developers identify sites and navigate uncertain regulatory environments. The second is construction, marked by EPC competition, land acquisition, and turbine supply races. The third is operational optimization, where O&M strategies, availability guarantees, and energy trading determine project success. But the fourth phase—the one

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