Spot electricity prices in Southeast Europe on Monday, August 21, range from 111.44 euros per MWh in Bulgaria, Romania and Greece to 122.4 euros per MWh in Hungary. In other countries of the region, the price reached 112.3 euros per MWh in Serbia, 118.37 euros per MWh in Croatia and 118.48 euros per MWh in Slovenia.
Compared to the previous day, wholesale electricity prices rose by 28-35% on Monday, considering that they remained below the threshold of 92 euros per MWh on Sunday.
In Central Europe, prices range from 115 to 125 euros per MWh on Monday, while the Finnish market is the most expensive on the continent, with 243.73 euros per MWh. On the other hand, the lowest European price was recorded in Norway – 19.65 euros per MWh.
Saturday, November 8
Trending
- Serbia: EPS launches €110 million modernization of Vlasina hydropower plants to boost capacity and extend lifespan
- Romania: Parapet and Alerion sign seven new solar projects totaling 80 MW
- North Macedonia: Day-ahead power trading jumps 82% year-on-year in October 2025
- Greece: ExxonMobil, Energean and Helleniq launch new offshore exploration phase in Ionian Sea
- Croatia: CROPEX electricity trading surges 90% year-on-year in October 2025
- Bulgaria: IBEX reports record intraday trading volume and sharp rise in electricity prices in October 2025
- EU report: Bulgaria must accelerate energy transition and reduce dependence on Russian gas
- Europe: TTF gas prices remain stable around €31–32/MWh as European demand and LNG growth slow






