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Energy Community’s CBAM Readiness Tracker: Western Balkans still far from exemption as full implementation nears

With less than three months remaining until the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is fully implemented, none of the Energy Community’s contracting parties has yet qualified for an exemption in the electricity segment, according to the 2025 CBAM Readiness Tracker. However, the Energy Community’s report suggests that efforts to meet the are gaining momentum, with Serbia, Moldova, North Macedonia, and Montenegro leading the way to market coupling with the EU, and almost all contracting parties planning to introduce carbon pricing.

These efforts signal a growing readiness across the Energy Community to turn CBAM into a catalyst for deeper regional energy market integration and decarbonization, according to the annual report.

“The progress reflected in this year’s tracker underlines that CBAM can drive – not deter – regional cooperation on the energy transition,” Energy Community Secretariat Director Artur Lorkowski stressed and added that the scheme should “serve as a bridge into the EU, not a barrier.”

Lorkowski: CBAM should serve as a bridge into the EU

Starting on January 1, 2026, the EU will charge fees on the CO2 emissions of goods imported from countries that don’t apply matching carbon pricing schemes. In addition to electricity, the carbon border tax will cover cement, iron and steel, aluminum, fertilizers, and hydrogen.

Serbia faces the highest exposure to CBAM costs

Estimates based on 2024 data show the CBAM exposure of EU electricity importers could reach around EUR 1.17 billion a year. Serbia accounts for the largest share, with an estimated EUR 612.5 million in annual CBAM costs, followed by North Macedonia, with about EUR 200 million, Montenegro, EUR 190 million, and Bosnia and Herzegovina, EUR 158 million. Moldova’s exposure is about EUR 6 million, while Albania, which has an electricity mix almost entirely dominated by renewables, faces no CBAM-related costs, according to the report.

The estimated average CBAM cost per megawatt-hour is EUR 33.14 for Moldova, EUR 59.71 for North Macedonia, EUR 62.45 for Montenegro, EUR 66.71 for Serbia, and EUR 73.37 for Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The criteria for a CBAM exemption for electricity include integrating the power market with the EU and introducing a carbon pricing system. A contracting party must also adopt EU regulations on energy, electricity, environment, and competition, increase the share of renewables in its energy mix to align with the EU’s 2030 targets, commit to climate neutrality by 2050 and submit a related roadmap to the EU, and implement measures to prevent indirect electricity imports from non-compliant countries.

Advances evident in emissions, renewables, and market coupling

The 2025 CBAM Readiness Tracker shows that last year alone, carbon intensity across the contracting parties’ power sectors fell by an average of 11%. At the same time, capacity from renewables, excluding large hydro, surged to 5.1 GW from 2 GW between 2020 and 2024. The expansion was driven almost entirely by solar and wind, helped by renewable energy auctions.

When it comes to electricity market integration, no contracting party has completed market coupling with the EU. However, Serbia, Moldova, North Macedonia, and Montenegro are approaching a “point of no return,” which represents a full transposition of EU regulations relevant for market coupling, according to the tracker.

The energy transition unfolding across the Energy Community contracting parties is both tangible and measurable, Adam Cwetsch, Head of the Green Deal Unit at the Energy Community Secretariat, told Balkan Green Energy News. “Carbon intensity in electricity production and economic output continues to fall, while renewable energy deployment accelerates through competitive auctions. This progress reflects a clear commitment to European decarbonisation goals and lays the foundation for deeper energy market integration and long-term climate neutrality,” he stressed.

The secretariat remains committed to ensuring the process continues smoothly – without obstacles from possible unintended impacts of CBAM, Cwetsch said.

Even though no contracting party has introduced a carbon pricing instrument for electricity, almost all of them have outlined plans to establish domestic systems that reflect their specific circumstances.

“This is a crucial step toward alignment with the EU’s carbon pricing framework under CBAM. The rollout of monitoring, reporting, and verification systems across the region is laying the groundwork for implementation and demonstrates growing readiness and credibility, even as timelines remain tight and challenges persist,” Cwetsch stated.

Available carbon pricing models are carbon taxes, ETS and a combination of the two

The available models are a carbon tax, an emissions trading system (ETS), and a hybrid version. The only contracting party that has no plans to introduce carbon pricing is Kosovo*, according to the report.

All contracting parties have concluded agreements to apply EU law in the fields of energy, electricity (including renewable energy), the environment, and competition. In each of them, the implementation of renewable energy legislation is either underway or showing visible progress, the report shows.

No Western Balkan country has included the EU’s 2050 climate goals into national legislation

On the other hand, Ukraine and Moldova are the only ones that have included the 2050 climate neutrality objective in national legislation, while no contracting party has submitted a corresponding roadmap to the EU.

Another requirement that no one has yet fulfilled is the establishment of an effective system to prevent indirect import of electricity into the EU from other third countries or territories that do not meet the CBAM exemption criteria for electricity.

* This designation is without prejudice to positions onstatus and is in line with UNSCR 1244/99 and the ICJ Opinion on the Kosovo declaration of independence.
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First feed-in tariff auction in Federation of BiH draws strong interest

Ahead of a public call for the first auction for feed-in tariffs for solar power plants, the Federation of BiH’s renewable energy authority has launched a survey to assess interest among potential participants.

The auction covers feed-in tariffs (FIT) for small solar installations with an installed capacity of up to 150 kW, according to the Operator for Renewable Energy Sources and Efficient Cogeneration (Operator za OIEiEK).

The survey aims to estimate the number of applications for the upcoming auction and will run from August 22 to September 22.

The quotas for each technology and the amounts of electricity eligible for incentives are set in the decree on quotas for renewable energy sources and efficient cogeneration. The quota for the first auction is set at 12 MW of solar, of which 1.2 MW is reserved for renewable energy communities.

Under the Law on the Use of Renewable Energy Sources and Efficient Cogeneration and the auction rulebook, the first FIT auction is also open to all existing power plants that have not previously received any kind of incentive for electricity production, Operator za OIEiEK noted.

This, along with rising inquiries from investors and electricity producers, is one of the reasons for conducting the survey. Operator za OIEiEK added that its purpose is to gather information and that it will serve solely to estimate the potential number of applications.

The auction will be launched once the e-auction system is operational

Completing the survey doesn’t constitute an application to the public call, nor does it create any legal or formal obligation. Operator za OIEiEK encourages investors to participate in the survey by completing a six-question questionnaire.

Meanwhile, in Mostar, Operator za OIEiEK organized a roundtable to present the auction rulebook.

According to the rulebook, the auction will be conducted through an e-auction system.

Currently, the e-auction system is in the trial phase, with training underway for Operator za OIEiEK staff. Once the system is operational, a public call for the first FIT auction will be launched, according to Operator za OIEiEK.

 

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Montenegro’s power utility gets EUR 25 million loan to expand Gvozd wind farm

Montenegrin state-owned power utility Elektroprivreda Crne Gore (EPCG) said it signed a EUR 25 million loan contract with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) for expanding the Gvozd wind farm to 75.6 MW. Once fully operational, it will be the largest wind farm in Montenegro.

The Gvozd 2 project involves the installation of three additional wind turbines, with a combined capacity of 21 MW. It will increase the wind farm’s total projected annual production to over 210 GWh, enough to cover the needs of about 36,000 households and reduce CO2 emissions by almost 137,000 tons a year, EPCG said following the signing of the loan agreement.

The expansion project involves three additional wind turbines with a combined capacity of 21 MW

An EUR 82 million loan for the first, 54.6 MW phase of the wind farm, including the grid connection infrastructure, was signed with the EBRD in June 2023. Gvozd will be EPCG’s first large-scale power generation facility built in more than 40 years.

Construction on the first phase, featuring eight turbines, began in November 2024. EPCG expects the power plant to enter trial operation by the end of this year, with a projected annual electricity output of 150 GWh.

Construction on the first, 54.6 MW phase of wind farm Gvozd was launched in late 2024

Commissioning of the full 75 MW capacity is expected by the end of 2026, according to a press release from the EBRD.

A key step in Montenegro’s energy transition

Milutin Đukanović, President of EPCG’s Board of Directors, described the expansion of Gvozd as a key step in Montenegro’s energy transition. In the press release, EPCG stated that the wind park would significantly contribute to achieving the European goal to produce electricity exclusively from clean sources by 2050 at the latest.

Minister of Energy and Mining Admir Šahmanović noted that the Gvozd project would strengthen Montenegro’s energy security, reduce CO2 emissions, and pave the way for sustainable development.

Francesco Corbo, the EBRD’s Regional Head of Energy for the Western Balkans and Croatia, recalled that the bank, through its Renewable Energy Market Accelerator (REMA) program, helped the Montenegrin authorities organize the country’s first renewable energy auction, for solar projects totaling 250 MW.

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Šahmanović: Montenegro expects first large private wind and solar plants to be online in 2026

Over the past year, Montenegro has adopted two reform laws – on energy and on renewable energy sources – and scheduled its first auctions for market premiums. Admir Šahmanović, Minister of Energy and Mining, told Balkan Green Energy News that the new regulations fully align the sector with the European Union acquis, sending a clear signal to investors that Montenegro now has a stable regulatory framework and market-based prices that safeguard citizens’ interests. Becoming part of the European energy space, he added, is not only a political goal but also the path Montenegro should follow to ensure cleaner and more secure energy for future generations.

Admir Šahmanović served as Minister of Mining, Oil and Gas in the government of Prime Minister Milojko Spajić. In February this year, he became the coordinator of the Ministry of Energy, and since April, he has served as Montenegro’s Minister of Energy and Mining. In an interview with Balkan Green Energy News, Šahmanović discusses his plans to mobilize larger investments, Montenegro’s timeframe for coupling its electricity market with Italy and the EU, the ministry’s steps to prepare the country for the EU’s carbon border tax, and plans for investments in the natural gas sector.

What are the key innovations introduced by Montenegro’s law on renewable energy sources?

The law on renewable energy sources introduced, for the first time, a clear, competitive and fully transparent support mechanism for green energy production – an auction scheme.

Over the past months, we have worked hard to ensure the law really takes hold. We have prepared about 15 by-laws that enabled us to launch the first auctions. I believe this is one of the most important contributions of the new law, as it sends a clear message to investors that Montenegro has a stable framework and market-based prices that safeguard citizens’ interests.

In this way, we are laying a solid foundation for a rapid energy transition, which is both our strategic choice and our responsibility to future generations.

Montenegro has also adopted a new law on energy. What does this regulation bring?

The Law on Energy is our umbrella regulation, providing a framework that fully aligns the sector with the EU acquis. It introduces stricter standards, greater protection of end consumers, better competition, and stronger institutional oversight.

It also opens Montenegro’s energy sector to the European market and creates a stable, predictable environment. This is important not only for investors but also for all consumers, as people are ultimately the ones affected by any change in the system.

You stated that these reforms set a clear strategic path for Montenegro, which sees its energy future within the European market. What will this future bring to Montenegro, its economy, and its citizens?

Our ambition is to make Montenegro a country with clean energy and a stable system. Being part of the European energy space ensures greater security of supply, lower costs in the long term, and a strong inflow of investments. Our economy will have access to a larger market, and our citizens will benefit from safe, sustainable, and environmentally friendly energy.

It is not just a political goal – it is a path I want us to follow in our development, so that we leave our children a country with cleaner and more secure energy.

Admir Šahmanović visiting northern Montenegro with EPCG Director Ivan Bulatović

Applications have been invited for Montenegro’s first auctions for market premiums. What benefits do you expect from auctions?

The auction mechanism allows us to select the most favorable and serious investors through a fair and competitive process. Projects are implemented without budget subsidies and with minimal risk to the state.

We expect auctions to ensure new capacities, create jobs, improve the use of our natural resources, and strengthen overall energy stability. These are the benefits citizens will feel, both on their electricity bills and through new opportunities that will open up in local communities.

Investor interest in wind and solar is strong, with requests to build power plants totaling around 5.5 GW. When do you expect these projects to be realized?

Such strong interest is the best proof that the reforms are yielding results. We expect the first large projects to be online in 2026, with significant capacities ready by 2030. Transparent procedures, good cooperation with local communities, and improved grid infrastructure will be key to making these investments a reality.

What are the main obstacles to these projects? How to remove them?

The biggest challenges are administrative procedures, transmission network limitations, and spatial planning documents. We are working to address them through interdepartmental cooperation, digitalization of processes, and the state’s commitment.

We are strengthening capacities, speeding up permitting, and modernizing regulations. I want to ensure that investors coming to Montenegro know they can work in a clear, predictable, and fair environment.

Admir Šahmanović at the ministerial panel at Belgrade Energy Forum 2025 in May

Preparations are underway to link Montenegro’s electricity market with the EU via Italy, with 2027 featuring as the target year.

Yes, we are working diligently on institutional and market integration. This involves harmonizing the rules, passing the remaining by-laws, and preparing the market operator. With the support of the EU and the Energy Community, I am confident that 2027 will remain the year when we will fully open our market to Europe.

All countries in the region are facing CBAM. How prepared is Montenegro?

CBAM will change the rules for electricity exports to the EU, bringing new costs as well as opportunities. We are aware that it will be a financial burden on our economy, but that is precisely why we view it as an additional incentive to accelerate the implementation of renewable energy projects and increase our own production of green electricity.

We are working on adjusting the regulatory framework, harmonizing economic activities, and ensuring the largest possible share of clean energy to remain competitive and maintain full access to the European market while reducing emissions.

Montenegro also has ambitious plans in the natural gas sector – a gas pipeline, a terminal for liquefied natural gas (LNG), and gas-fired power plants. How far along are these projects?

I see gas as a development opportunity – to ensure greater security of supply, diversification, and new opportunities for the economy. But I also believe that such strategic projects must be developed through dialogue with local communities, with full respect for their views.

We are currently preparing and developing the Ionian Adriatic Pipeline (IAP) project and assessing the potential for an LNG terminal. We are doing this responsibly, one step at a time, and in line with the EU’s energy transition goals.

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WindEurope urges Germany to drop negative bidding in wind auctions, switch to CfDs

Germany’s second offshore wind auction in 2025 failed to attract bids from developers, sending a clear signal that the country’s wind auction design, which relies on negative bidding, is not fit for purpose, WindEurope has warned. Instead of swimming against the tide, Germany should follow in the footsteps of other European countries and switch to contracts for difference (CfDs), according to the European wind industry association.

The auction covered two offshore wind sites in the North Sea with a combined capacity of 2.5 GW, but no developer placed a bid. That should be a wake-up call for the German government, according to Viktoriya Kerelska, Director of Advocacy & Messaging at WindEurope.

In negative bidding, developers offer the amount of money they are willing to pay for the right to build a wind farm, with the highest bid most likely to win. In the CfD model, on the other hand, they bid the electricity price they need, and receive compensation from the government if the market price falls below that level.

Kerelska: Negative bidding reduces the number of companies willing to participate in auctions

Negative bidding does not offer any revenue stabilization and exposes bidders to risks that go beyond their control. The uncapped negative bidding further intensifies the financial pressure on offshore wind developers by asking them to pay high sums for the right to develop an offshore wind farm, according to WindEurope.

“Negative bidding adds costs that make offshore wind more expensive and reduces the number of companies willing and able to participate in auctions,” Kerelska stated, adding it is time to amend the auction model so Germany can deliver on its offshore wind targets and industrial competitiveness.

Wind energy provides 30% of all electricity consumed in Germany, making it crucial for ensuring competitive prices for households and industry as well as energy security, WindEurope noted.

CfDs ensure lower financing costs and more predictable revenues

Most countries in Europe have introduced two-sided CfDs as a revenue stabilization mechanism for offshore wind development. It ensures lower financing costs and more visibility on future revenues, WindEurope said, noting that Denmark was the latest country to switch to CfDs after its 3 GW negative bidding offshore wind tender failed to attract any bids last December.

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RP Global gets EUR 12.2 million loan for Novalja solar project

RP Global has secured a EUR 12.2 million loan to build its Novalja solar power plant in Croatia.

In late April, Austrian company RP Global began the construction of the Novalja photovoltaic plant at the Zaglava site on the island of Pag.

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) said it approved a senior non-recourse project finance loan of up to EUR 12.2 million to RP Global Novalja d.o.o., owned by RP Global Energy GmbH, for the development and construction of the 21 MW Novalja PV plant in Croatia.

The project has been approved under the EBRD InvestEU Framework for Sustainable Transition.

The loan is divided into two tranches

The loan is split into two tranches: one amounting to a maximum of EUR 7.2 million, and the second of up to EUR 5 million, benefiting from a 20% first loss coverage under the EBRD InvestEU Framework for Sustainable Transition, the bank’s decision reads.

The total project cost is estimated at EUR 16.3 million.

The endeavor includes the installation of 35,776 photovoltaic panels. The expected annual electricity production is around 31,000 MWh, enough to supply about 12,000 households.

According to the EBRD, the project supports innovative offtake arrangements. It will combine a national renewables support with a merchant exposure in later years.

RP Global won premiums for its project at auctions

Last July, the Croatian Energy Market Operator (HROTE) awarded premiums for solar and hydropower plants with a total capacity of 420 MW. RP Global’s Novalja was among them, with 15 MW.

Back in 2022, the company said it intended to build wind farms and solar parks of 500 MW overall in Croatia over the next five years.

RP Global has completed two renewable energy projects in Croatia: the Danilo wind farm near Šibenik and the Rudine wind park near Dubrovnik.

Of note, the island town of Novalja could become one of the first in Croatia to begin the production of green hydrogen, and a rare example in the region. A project was launched in May.

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EU faces first annual solar installation decline since 2015 – report

The European Union is set to install less new solar capacity in 2025 than it did last year – the first annual drop in a decade, according to SolarPower Europe.

In its mid-year analysis of the photovoltaic market in the EU, SolarPower Europe said new installations are expected to decrease 1.4% this year. It would be the first slowdown since 2015. The market increased by 47% in 2022, by 51% in 2023, and by 3.3% in 2024.

The EU is set to add 64.2 GW, compared to 65.1 GW in 2024, SolarPower Europe said.

The update comes after solar became the EU’s largest source of electricity for the first time, in June 2025. According to Ember, photovoltaics generated 22.1% of EU electricity (45.4 TWh) last month, more than any other power source. In absolute terms, it was a year-over-year increase of 22%.

Dries Acke, Deputy CEO of SolarPower Europe, said the 1.4% decline may seem small, but that the symbolism is big. In his view, a market decline, right when solar is meant to be accelerating, deserves EU leaders’ attention.

“Europe needs competitive electricity, energy security, and climate solutions. Solar delivers on all of those needs. Now policymakers must deliver the electrification, flexibility and energy storage frameworks that will drive solar success through the rest of the decade,” Acke stated.

The European Commission’s 2025 target for overal PV capacity is 400 GW, while by the end of the year the bloc should host 402 GW. To meet the 2030 target, and deliver the continent’s decarbonisation and competitiveness goals, Europe must install nearly 70 GW per year through the rest of the decade, according to SolarPower Europe.

Rooftop segment is shrinking

The projected decrease in solar is driven primarily by a declining rooftop segment, particularly home solar, the report reads.

Traditionally strong residential rooftop solar markets, like Italy, the Netherlands, Austria, Belgium, Czechia, and Hungary, are slowing. Households there are now postponing installations as the impact of the 2022 energy crisis wanes, according to the association.

There is one more reason – a withdrawal of incentive schemes without adequate replacements. It resulted in a residential rooftop market collapse of over 60% versus 2023 in most of the group. Similarly, Poland, Spain, and Germany are experiencing a decline of over 40%. Good news comes from utility-scale solar. It is expected to continue growing and amount to around half of all new capacity additions.

The authors of the outlook attributed the confidence to improved auction design, and the boost in auction-deployed solar from hybrid and co-located storage projects, especially in Germany and Bulgaria. Germany leads in solar auctions, followed by the Netherlands, France, and Italy, with Poland and Ireland also scaling up, the report underlines.

It also points to a weakening in the segment of corporate power purchase agreements (PPAs). They have been a key driver of utility-scale solar in recent years. However, in 2025, falling electricity prices have reduced buyers’ incentive to sign long-term deals.

New solar PPA signings have dropped by 41% in the second quarter of this year against end-March, according to the report.

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R. Power Renewables to start construction of 55 MW PV project in Romania

Polish company R. Power Renewables is about to build a solar power plant in Romania of 55 MW in peak capacity.

R. Power Renewables published the main details ahead of the start of construction of its Lazuri Solar Park, located in Satu Mare county in Romania.

The company said it is a major step forward in its commitment to expanding sustainable energy infrastructure in Central and Eastern Europe.

The works are set to begin before the end of September, according to the update. The facility is scheduled to come online in the third quarter of 2026.

The Lazuri Solar Park will be connected to the national grid through a newly constructed 110 kV switching station

The Lazuri Solar Park will be connected to the national grid through a newly constructed 110 kV switching station, implementing a loop-in/loop-out connection on the existing Vetiș–Abator 110 kV overhead transmission line, according to R. Power Renewables.

The project will not only contribute to Romania’s renewable energy targets but also strengthen local energy security and grid resilience, the Warsaw-based company underlined.

The solar farm of 55 MW in peak terms would generate approximately 70 GWh of clean electricity per year — enough to meet the annual needs of over 48,000 households and avoid nearly 17,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions.

Lazuri is one of five R. Power’s solar farms in Romania that secured a 15-year power purchase contract

Lazuri is one of five R. Power’s solar power projects in Romania that secured 15-year contracts-for-difference (CfDs) through the national auction scheme, the firm said and added that in total, it won support for 85 MW of installed capacity.

In December 2024, after years of delays, the Ministry of Energy finally selected projects of an overall 1.53 GW, slightly more than the quota, in the first round of auctions.

Wind and solar power projects are eligible for subsidies under the CfD scheme. The first round of auctions resulted with ten and eleven winning bids, respectively.

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Svetlana Cerović: Serbia should consider the role of batteries in next renewables auction

Serbia is expected to finish drafting its energy storage regulations by the end of the year, completing its already strong regulatory framework for renewables, according to Svetlana Cerović, Head of Specialized Lending at UniCredit Bank Serbia. In the next auction for market premiums, Serbia should consider recognizing the contribution of projects involving energy storage, she said at Belgrade Energy Forum 2025.

The two renewable energy auctions Serbia has held so far have shown that its regulatory framework is exceptionally good, Svetlana Cerović said on the sidelines of BEF 2025, adding that it is very important for a third auction to take place to ensure the development of additional renewable energy capacities.

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Initiating and financing investments in renewable energy requires a stable, predictable, and transparent regulatory framework, she stressed.

When it comes to regulations covering energy storage, Cerović said she was encouraged to hear that they were being drafted quickly and could be finalized before the end of this year.

“When we talk about renewable energy sources, we talk about long-term financing. Most of these projects are financed through project financing without the right of recourse, and in this sense, the regulatory framework and the predictability of cash flows are very important,” she reiterated.

UniCredit, as a pioneer in the field of renewable energy financing, offers various types of services and has already supported several projects that have been awarded market premiums and guarantees, according to Cerović. “We continue to actively finance these projects and remain open to dialogue,” she said.

UniCredit has financed several projects that have won market premiums

Speaking at a panel on energy storage in Southeast Europe, Cerović said that Serbia should consider involving energy storage in the next auction for market premiums and facilitate flexibility services, adding that the first renewables projects in Serbia that are required to include energy storage are already negotiating financing.

Cerović: The state should subsidize batteries for prosumers and back smaller renewables projects

She also recommended subsidizing battery storage for prosumers as an energy efficiency measure and allocating part of the auction quota for smaller renewables projects, which find it difficult to secure long-term power purchase agreements (PPA).

Talking about BEF 2025, she said the forum had demonstrated its exceptional significance and relevance by bringing together key players in the financing and development of energy projects. The conference was extremely useful for UniCredit, allowing it to make important contacts and initiate potential partnerships, according to her.

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BEF 2025: Regional cooperation can facilitate energy transition, energy security

Montenegro, Serbia, and the Republic of Srpska don’t have a problem attracting investments in electricity production, but they do have issues when it comes to investments in transmission networks. If the introduction of CBAM is not postponed, it will greatly burden their economies. Hungary is interested in strengthening energy ties with them as well as the rest of the Western Balkans, which would bolster energy security for the whole region. Croatia could also assist it in strengthening employment in the green technologies sector, to counter the loss of jobs due to decarbonization. These are the main messages from the High-ministerial panel on SEE regional cooperation and energy transition strategies.

The ministerial panel was the first of eight at this year’s Belgrade Energy Forum 2025 (BEF 2025). The conference, organized by Balkan Green Energy News, welcomed four hundred participants from more than 30 countries from the region, Europe, and beyond.

The panel featured representatives of the governments of Montenegro, Croatia, Hungary, the Republic of Srpska – one of the two political entities in Bosnia and Herzegovina – Serbia, and the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE). The moderator of the panel was Dirk Buschle, who until recently was a key figure in the Energy Community Secretariat, and now is a partner at law firm Becker Büttner Held.

He noted it is a mistake to say that the contracting parties of the Energy Community are lagging behind EU countries in the energy transition. They all face the same issues, which are energy accessibility, supply security, and sustainability, Buschle added.

Additional proof, in his words, are the similar issues faced by investors – in grid connections and permitting.

Investments in production are coming, the issues are grids, CBAM

Dirk Buschle, Petar Đokić and Admir Šahmanović

According to Minister of Energy and Mining of the Republic of Srpska Petar Đokić, the entity has made significant progress in defining a regulatory framework that aligns with the rules of the Energy Community and the European Union.

He noted that with the help of the Energy Community Secretariat, the two entities of BiH recently reached an agreement on adopting a law on the electricity regulator, transmission, and market. It is one of the cornerstones for establishing an organized electricity market.

The Republic of Srpska was successful in attracting investments in green energy in recent years, Đokić added. It established concessions and partnerships for the construction of 2,200 MW of renewable energy power plants – wind, solar, and hydropower.

However, large investments in transmission networks are also necessary, he pointed out and said he expects assistance from the European Union’s financial institutions such as the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and the European Investment Bank (EIB), as well as the World Bank.

Đokić: CBAM to hit hard BiH’s economy

The minister called on them to set up such partnerships.

Regarding the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), he said that measures have been taken to change the domestic energy mix. Until recently, the share of fossil fuels was 62%, but it has now dropped to 54%, he recalled.

By 2028, the Republic of Srpska will have two new hydropower plants, of 159 MW and 36 MW, and new solar power plants with a total capacity of 250 MW, the minister asserted. It would additionally green the energy mix, Đokić said.

CBAM, in his words, could harm the economy of the Republic of Srpska and BiH.

If it is applied the way it is apparently envisaged, it would result in a significant increase in costs, with a severe negative impact, he underlined. Đoković expressed hope that the rollout would be separately discussed in the case of BiH.

Šahmanović: Montenegro is finishing its NECP

Montenegro also enjoys great interest from investors. It has received applications for building solar power plants and wind farms with a total capacity of 5.5 GW, said Admir Šahmanović, Minister of Energy and Mining.

The country’s current capacity is slightly over 1 GW.

It is, in his words, the result of improving the regulatory framework including the adoption of laws on renewable energy sources and energy. However, investment in the transmission grid is also necessary. The government plans to discuss with Italy the possibility of installing another subsea cable for electricity transmission, while the national energy and climate plan (NECP) will be completed by the end of next month, the minister revealed.

Montenegro is requesting a postponement of CBAM until 2030

In addition, renewable energy auctions are being prepared with the EBRD, and a memorandum on market coupling with Italy will be signed, he added.

As for CBAM, the minister stressed that Montenegro doesn’t believe the EU wants to harm its economy, but argued that the country isn’t ready for the mechanism’s implementation.

“Perhaps we are now in a situation similar to where our EU partners were 20 years ago. So, we need to invest a lot in our production capacities, grid, storage. It will take years, so if we don’t receive an exemption by 2030, I believe we won’t be able to handle this challenge,” Šahmanović stressed.

Secure supply of the national market is the highest priority

Boglárka Illés, Admir Šahmanović and Jovana Joksimović

Jovana Joksimović, Serbian assistant minister of mining and energy for international cooperation, European integration, and project management, expressed the opinion that the energy transition is a long and intensive process, technically, operationally, and financially.

Since October 2022, renewable energy in the energy mix has increased by 83%, which demonstrates the progress of the energy transition in Serbia, Joksimović asserted.

“We need to be realistic, as well as socially aware, because a fair and sustainable transition is something that should be carefully considered when changing the energy mix, where coal accounts for 60%,” she noted.

Joksimović: The priority is to ensure a sufficient supply of electricity at the most affordable prices for citizens and the economy

It is necessary, in her words, to be ambitious and dedicated to the energy transition goals, but she is convinced that there is a higher objective.

At the country level, it is to ensure enough electricity at the most affordable prices for both citizens and the economy, she underlined. “That’s what our top priority is,” Joksimović underscored.

Guided by the said goal, Serbia is also considering the use of nuclear energy and a study on possible options is currently being prepared.

Boglárka Illés, State Secretary for Bilateral Relations at Hungary’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, also stressed that the government’s primary duty is to ensure not only climate neutrality and sustainable energy but also affordable energy with a stable supply for households and businesses.

She pointed out that diversifying energy imports and the energy mix plays a key role in securing energy sovereignty. It is the reason why cooperation with the Western Balkans, and especially Serbia, is important to Hungary, Illés asserted.

Illés: Europe’s energy security has been demolished

A few days before, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said the EU has abandoned a successful economic strategy, based on cheap Russian gas and advanced German technology.

“And now we don’t see any other strategy within the EU,” she stated.

Due to ideologically driven sanctions against Russia, and the European Green Deal, the energy security of Europe is demolished, in Illés’s opinion. The region is located at the intersection of essential energy routes, connecting the East and the West, and also South and North, she underlined.

“We, as an EU member country, can act as a bridge between non-EU member countries and also the EU,” the state secretary stressed.

As an example of good cooperation with Serbia, she highlighted the supply of gas through the TurkStream pipeline and the Pannonian Corridor project for doubling the capacity for power exchange between the two countries.

The energy transition is an opportunity

Jovana Joksimović, Marija Pujo Tadić and Dario Liguti

In one respect, Marija Pujo Tadić, Special Envoy for Climate Action from the Government of Croatia, doesn’t share the opinion of the Hungarian official. She argued it isn’t true that Europe lacks a plan.

The EU has a clear plan and a well-defined strategy – it is the Clean Industrial Deal, she stressed.

She highlighted two important strategies relevant to the region: the Paris Agreement and the Green Agenda for the Western Balkans.

As a member of the scientific advisory board for the COP 29 presidency, she recalled that this year a review of nationally determined contributions (NDCs) would be conducted. It is an assessment of how countries are meeting their plans for lowering CO2 emissions.

Pujo Tadić: Education and workforce specialization are essential

She underlined the Green Agenda for the Western Balkans also envisages reducing net greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2050, which is essentially the shared goal of the EU.

However, Pujo Tadić expressed the belief that policies and laws alone are not enough. Public education and workforce specialization are also necessary because the transition will create many new jobs, she added.

Croatia could be of great support to the Western Balkans, having launched such educational programs five years ago, according to Pujo Tadić.

The link between the energy transition and the creation of new jobs was also stressed by Dario Liguti, Director of Sustainable Energy at UNECE. In his view, the region has a huge opportunity to become part of the supply chains for green technologies by greening the domestic power generation and by leaning on the EU’s energy transition.

He sees the main factors for it in the region’s geographic proximity to the large European market, and the large, skilled workforce that can be educated for other tasks. Liguti drew a connection with the expected job loss from decarbonization measures and the related need for a just transition.

Liguti: There is great potential for energy efficiency in the region

Liguti praised the forthcoming investments in renewable energy production, but warned it is only one side of the story, arguing that the other one is energy efficiency. He reminded the audience that the region’s energy intensity is high, saying there is room for savings.

The installation of big solar plants and wind farms, in his words, is great because it’s very visible.

“It’s a great investment and makes a lot of sense. The harder part is making energy efficiency investments, whether in buildings or the industrial processes in large, small, or medium enterprises,” Liguti stated.

As an example, he recalled that UNECE is running a project with the EBRD in North Macedonia to support households and small and medium enterprises to lower the costs of liquid fuels and electricity.

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