After Serbia’s grid clampdown on new renewable connections, investors are asking a natural question: is Montenegro next? The answer is: not yet. Montenegro is not a Serbia-style…
Browsing: grid
South East Europe’s electricity-price problem is often explained through generation: too much coal, not enough renewables, too much gas exposure, or not enough storage. These explanations…
Serbia’s wind energy sector is entering a decisive transition period. For most of the previous decade, the country’s renewable narrative centered on growth — more megawatts,…
For most of the past two decades, South-East Europe’s energy investment story revolved around generation. Governments promoted coal modernization, hydropower expansion, wind projects, solar parks and…
Europe’s energy transition has entered a phase where ambition is no longer the binding constraint. Capital is available, policy frameworks are largely aligned, and renewable pipelines…
South-East Europe’s power transition is no longer being financed primarily through utility balance sheets and state-backed transmission plans. The ownership map is changing. Strategic developers, trading…
Transmission investment across South-East Europe is entering its most capital-intensive phase in decades. System operators including EMS Serbia, Transelectrica Romania, ESO Bulgaria, CGES Montenegro and IPTO Greece are…
Across Southeast Europe, a persistent and politically sensitive anomaly continues to shape industrial competitiveness and investor behaviour: wholesale electricity prices remain structurally higher than in core…
Europe’s energy transition is grid-limited. This is no longer a warning; it is a defining condition. Across the continent, renewable capacity is outpacing the physical ability…
Serbia’s automotive industry has built its reputation on the production of wiring harnesses—one of the most labour-intensive yet technically sensitive components in modern vehicles. Wiring systems…



