Gross electricity production in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (FBiH) reached 774 GWh in February 2026, marking a 25.4% increase compared to 617 GWh recorded in February of the previous year. This strong year-on-year growth highlights a significant expansion in the region’s electricity output.
In the total gross production mix, hydropower plants accounted for 57.6%, thermal power plants contributed 35%, while wind farms made up the remaining 7.4%. This structure underscores the continued dominance of hydropower in the energy balance of the Federation.
Net electricity production stood at 740 GWh. Of this total, 443 GWh came from hydropower plants, 240 GWh from thermal power plants, and 57 GWh from wind farms, reflecting a diversified but hydro-heavy generation profile.
Electricity imports in February amounted to 147 GWh, compared to 191 GWh in the same month last year, indicating a reduction in import dependence. At the same time, electricity exports totaled 83 GWh, slightly lower than the 87 GWh recorded in February of the previous year, showing relatively stable cross-border trade flows.
On the fuel side, brown coal production reached 257,695 tons in February 2026, representing an 18.7% decline compared to 316,897 tons produced in 2024. Lignite production also decreased, totaling 96,384 tons in February 2026 versus 111,261 tons a year earlier, marking a 13.4% drop.
Coke production experienced an even sharper decline, falling to 17,861 tons in February 2026 from 29,046 tons in February 2025, a decrease of 38.5%. These declines point to reduced activity in the coal-based segment of the energy and industrial sector.
Overall, the data indicates a strong increase in electricity generation alongside a notable contraction in fossil fuel production, reflecting a gradual shift in the energy structure and output dynamics within the Federation.





