The European Union’s growing dependence on U.S. LNG is often framed as a success story of diversification and energy security. For South-East Europe (SEE), however, this…
Browsing: SEE
The emerging dispute between the United States and the European Union over methane-emissions regulation is often framed as a transatlantic regulatory disagreement. For South-East Europe (SEE),…
Electricity trading in Southeast Europe (SEE) is no longer about forecasting average prices. It is about understanding when prices break away from expectations, where congestion appears…
Electricity trading in Southeast Europe (SEE) has entered a new phase. The region is no longer defined by static net import or export positions, nor by…
Much of the debate around Southeast Europe (SEE) electricity market integration focuses on trading platforms and regulatory alignment. Yet the true catalyst lies elsewhere: grid connection…
Recent reversals in cross-border capacity auction prices between Central and Southeast Europe have drawn close attention from market participants. Annual and monthly auction outcomes on corridors…
The European Union’s renewed political focus on reducing electricity price discrepancies between member states is often framed as a corrective to market fragmentation. In Southeast Europe…
Battery storage is emerging as one of the clearest winners of Europe’s evolving power market design. While attention often focuses on Germany, the Netherlands, or the…
Europe’s transition from hourly to 15-minute market time units is often presented as a technical reform designed to better reflect renewable generation. For Southeast Europe, however,…
Serbia’s industrial competitiveness is increasingly shaped not by domestic conditions alone but by regional electricity spreads across Southeast Europe. The price difference between Hungary’s HUPX, Romania’s…



