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Serbia needs EUR 27 billion to reach decarbonization goals

Serbia faces a substantial financial and structural challenge in its transition toward a low-carbon energy system. According to recent statements from senior management at the state-owned utility EPS, the country will need approximately EUR 27 billion in investment to meet its decarbonization objectives by 2050.

This estimate underscores both the scale of transformation required and the limits of the current energy model, which remains heavily reliant on fossil fuels—particularly coal—while moving toward alignment with European climate and energy policies.

Financing the Transition: Beyond Public Balance Sheets

A central conclusion emerging from the discussion is that Serbia’s decarbonization pathway cannot be financed through internal resources alone. EPS leadership emphasized that achieving a sustainable transition will require a diversified financing structure involving the state, international financial institutions, commercial banks, and capital markets.

In practical terms, this reflects a broader shift in energy policy: decarbonization is no longer only a technical or environmental issue, but fundamentally a question of financial architecture. Access to long-term, low-cost capital—combined with appropriate risk-sharing mechanisms—will be critical to mobilizing the required investment scale.

To that end, EPS is preparing to enter both domestic and international capital markets. A key milestone in this process is the expected acquisition of a credit rating, which would enable the company to issue green bonds and attract institutional investors.
Such instruments are increasingly central to energy transition financing across Europe, particularly in markets where public funding capacity is constrained.

Structural Transformation of the Power Sector

Beyond financing, the transition implies a deep restructuring of Serbia’s generation portfolio. The gradual decommissioning of aging thermal power plants is seen as inevitable, reflecting both environmental requirements and declining economic viability.

At the same time, the development of renewable energy capacity—primarily wind and solar—is expected to accelerate. EPS has indicated a willingness to engage more actively with private investors through joint ventures, power purchase agreements (PPAs), and even the acquisition of completed or late-stage renewable projects.

This signals a notable evolution in the role of the state utility, from a traditional vertically integrated operator toward a more market-oriented and partnership-driven entity.

Importantly, Serbia’s existing asset base—particularly land holdings and grid infrastructure—provides a strategic advantage for scaling renewable deployment. Leveraging these assets efficiently could reduce project development timelines and costs, improving overall investment attractiveness.

Market Integration and Investor Engagement

The transition strategy also highlights the need for stronger integration with private capital and market mechanisms. EPS leadership explicitly stressed the importance of becoming more agile and active in the market, including building relationships with investors and adapting to competitive dynamics.

This reflects a broader regional trend in the Western Balkans, where historically state-dominated energy sectors are gradually opening to private participation. However, this transition requires not only regulatory reform but also improvements in corporate governance, transparency, and financial performance.

Recent financial results from EPS indicate positive momentum, with a significant increase in annual profit, which could strengthen its credibility with investors and lenders.
Nevertheless, maintaining financial discipline while undertaking large-scale capital expenditure will remain a key challenge.

Strategic Implications: A Transition at Scale and Speed

From a policy perspective, the EUR 27 billion investment requirement highlights the magnitude of Serbia’s decarbonization challenge. The country’s energy system is still largely carbon-intensive, with fossil fuels accounting for a dominant share of electricity generation, making the transition both urgent and complex.

Decarbonization will therefore require a coordinated approach that integrates infrastructure investment, market reform, and financial innovation. It will also need to address social and economic implications, particularly in regions dependent on coal production and thermal generation.

Crucially, the success of this transition will depend on Serbia’s ability to align its energy policy framework with EU standards, improve investment conditions, and mobilize both domestic and international capital at scale.

Conclusion

Serbia’s pathway to decarbonization is now clearly defined in terms of scale, direction, and urgency. The estimated EUR 27 billion investment requirement is not merely a financial figure it represents a comprehensive transformation of the country’s energy system.

The coming years will be decisive. Progress will depend on the effectiveness of financing strategies, the pace of structural reform, and the ability of key institutions such as EPS to evolve into modern, market-oriented energy players. Without these elements, the transition risks delays; with them, Serbia has the potential to position itself as a credible participant in Europe’s low-carbon energy future.

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Balkan power play: why the Western Balkans must ditch Russian fuels and fast-track EU market integration

A short, sharp truth: the Western Balkans sits at the crossroads of Europe’s energy security and its green ambitions, but patchy rules, lingering dependence on Russian fuels and slow market reforms mean the region risks being a weak link rather than a bridge. A new working paper from Bruegel lays out what’s at stake and what needs to happen next.

From leverage to liability: Russian ties still matter

Gas pipeline system in the Western Balkans

Gas pipeline system in the Western Balkans

The report finds that several Western Balkan states remain exposed to Russian energy influence notably Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina on oil and gas  which leaves them vulnerable to geopolitical pressure and imported price shocks. Negotiations and occasional extensions of Russian contracts in 2024–25 underline that diversification on paper does not always mean real independence. That dependence isn’t just political theatre: it alters investment choices, weakens bargaining power and complicates alignment with EU rules.

Why this matters beyond the region: the Western Balkans is a major transit corridor for electricity between the EU and Southeast Europe. The paper highlights that as much as “up to 70%” of electricity flows tied to the region actually pass between EU countries a signal that grid interdependence already exists and that isolation is neither realistic nor desirable. Faster regulatory alignment and market coupling would therefore strengthen European system resilience as well as the region’s.

 Western Balkan electricity imports and exports (TWh), 2020-2024

Western Balkan electricity imports and exports (TWh), 2020-2024

Market coupling: planned, stalled, urgent

European market coupling the technical and regulatory merging of power markets is the single policy lever that could deliver immediate gains: better price signals, more efficient dispatch across borders, and a buffer against supply shocks. The Bruegel authors point out that integration planned for the mid-2020s (originally aiming around 2027) is running behind because national rulebooks and market institutions in the Western Balkans are not yet aligned with EU standards. That delay has real costs: lost efficiency, higher system operation expenses, and a slower rollout of renewables.

 Day-ahead auction average prices (€/MWh), EU, Norway and Western Balkans, 2024

Day-ahead auction average prices (€/MWh), EU, Norway and Western Balkans, 2024

Uneven green progress  leaders and laggards

Not all Western Balkan countries are on the same page when it comes to the green transition. The paper singles out Albania as a regional leader largely because of its hydropower legacy and relatively favorable renewables policies and Montenegro as advanced across several indicators. Meanwhile, solar and wind potential across much of the region remains largely untapped and constrained by underdeveloped grids, weak permitting frameworks and scarcity of private investment. Simply put: the natural resource advantage (sun, wind, hydro) is mostly unexploited.

This mix of actors creates both a challenge and an opportunity. Countries with stronger renewables backbones could become exporters and stabilizers for neighbors but only if cross-border trade is enabled and market rules are harmonised.

Domestic electricity prices (€/MWh), EU, Norway and Western Balkans, 2024 and 2014

Domestic electricity prices (€/MWh), EU, Norway and Western Balkans, 2024 and 2014

Coal’s long shadow political economy vs. emissions

Phasing out coal is politically charged across the Western Balkans. Coal still provides baseload power and jobs in several countries, and switching it off without credible compensation or alternative industrial plans risks social backlash. The paper recommends phased, socially sensitive coal retirement plans tied to clear investment pathways for renewables and grid upgrades. In short: decarbonisation must be realistic and sequenced fast where possible, compensated where needed.

Practical steps the paper recommends (and why policymakers should care)

  1. Accelerate regulatory alignment with the EU. Aligning rules is the low-hanging fruit that unlocks market coupling and immediate efficiency gains. Market reforms are technical, but the payoff — lower costs and stronger security — is political and strategic.

  2. Reduce real dependence on Russian fuels. Diversification must go beyond headline contracts. It requires investments in LNG connections, alternative import routes, and faster roll-out of domestic renewables to reduce import vulnerability.

  3. Design a just coal phase-out. Pair plant retirement timetables with retraining, economic revitalisation, and clean-energy investment envelopes so communities are not left behind.

  4. Mobilise private capital for renewables and grids. Improve permitting, de-risk projects with public guarantees, and create transparent auction frameworks to attract the investors the region needs.

Political and financial headwinds plus a window of opportunity

The paper is candid about constraints: weak institutions, fragmented markets, and geopolitical tensions complicate reform. But it also notes a narrow window where EU enlargement dynamics, conditional funding instruments (the EU Growth Plan for the Western Balkans) and post-Ukraine energy policy realignments create momentum and conditional financing that can be leveraged if countries move quickly and coherently.

Electricity generation mix in the Western Balkans, 2014 and 2024

Electricity generation mix in the Western Balkans, 2014 and 2024

What success looks like

A successful pathway would see the Western Balkans converge with EU market rules, complete market coupling, significantly reduce Russian fuel exposure, and scale renewables deployment while phasing out coal with social protections. Practically, that means lower wholesale price volatility, better utilisation of regional transmission assets, and an energy sector that attracts investment rather than fears it.

Conclusion integration first, transition faster

The Bruegel working paper’s central message is straightforward: the Western Balkans has the geographic and resource advantages to be a strategic partner for Europe’s energy security and green goals but only if the political will to align rules, diversify supplies and invest in renewables is found. Fast-tracking market coupling and decarbonisation in parallel, not in sequence will deliver both security and economic opportunity. For policymakers in Tirana, Sarajevo, Pristina, Podgorica, Skopje and Belgrade, the choice is clear: remain a transit corridor vulnerable to outside influence, or become a resilient, integrated bridge to Europe’s clean-energy future.

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Energy Community Secretariat sets up renewables support hub for contracting parties

The Energy Community Secretariat has established a hub to speed up the deployment of renewables in contracting parties with a focus on transforming coal mines.

With the exception of Albania, members of the Energy Community in the Western Balkans generate electricity predominantly by burning coal from domestic mines.

Locations of depleted mines are suitable for renewable electricity plants.

The new Centre for Renewables Acceleration is a regional hub designed to provide technical support to all Energy Community contracting parties in accelerating renewable energy deployment through improved planning and coordination, according to the Energy Community Secretariat.

The center will especially help support the rollout of renewables acceleration areas (RAA) in brownfields, including coal mines.

Strengthening public trust in the energy transition is essential

In these locations, renewable energy projects can move forward more quickly through streamlined procedures grounded in strategic spatial planning that protects sensitive ecosystems, in the secretariat’s view.

It sees strengthening public trust in the energy transition as key to this mission, particularly in regions affected by coal phase-out and undergoing broader structural changes.

In the Western Balkans, the center will be supported through a partnership with the Open Society Foundations – Western Balkans (OSF-WB). The two sides recently formalized cooperation through a memorandum of understanding.

Work is complemented by the secretariat’s cooperation with The Nature Conservancy

Their activities in supporting the region include pilot interventions in contracting parties, expert exchanges, capacity-building initiatives and regional workshops.

The partnership with OSF-WB builds on the secretariat’s ongoing work in Ukraine, supported by the European Climate Foundation, which focuses on developing cross-border renewables acceleration areas in five regions bordering the EU and Moldova.

This work is further complemented by the secretariat’s cooperation with international environmental organization The Nature Conservancy (TNC), whose EU-recognized methodology for designating renewables acceleration areas informed the development of the Operational Blueprint for the Designation of RAAs in the Energy Community region and now serves as a best practice, the update reads.

Back in 2023, the secretariat and TNC formed a partnership to improve the planning and permitting procedures for renewable energy projects. TNC has implemented projects on RAAs in Serbia, Montenegro.

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Energy Community Secretariat sets up renewables support hub for contracting parties

The Energy Community Secretariat has established a hub to speed up the deployment of renewables in contracting parties with a focus on transforming coal mines.

With the exception of Albania, members of the Energy Community in the Western Balkans generate electricity predominantly by burning coal from domestic mines.

Locations of depleted mines are suitable for renewable electricity plants.

The new Centre for Renewables Acceleration is a regional hub designed to provide technical support to all Energy Community contracting parties in accelerating renewable energy deployment through improved planning and coordination, according to the Energy Community Secretariat.

The center will especially help support the rollout of renewables acceleration areas (RAA) in brownfields, including coal mines.

Strengthening public trust in the energy transition is essential

In these locations, renewable energy projects can move forward more quickly through streamlined procedures grounded in strategic spatial planning that protects sensitive ecosystems, in the secretariat’s view.

It sees strengthening public trust in the energy transition as key to this mission, particularly in regions affected by coal phase-out and undergoing broader structural changes.

In the Western Balkans, the center will be supported through a partnership with the Open Society Foundations – Western Balkans (OSF-WB). The two sides recently formalized cooperation through a memorandum of understanding.

Work is complemented by the secretariat’s cooperation with The Nature Conservancy

Their activities in supporting the region include pilot interventions in contracting parties, expert exchanges, capacity-building initiatives and regional workshops.

The partnership with OSF-WB builds on the secretariat’s ongoing work in Ukraine, supported by the European Climate Foundation, which focuses on developing cross-border renewables acceleration areas in five regions bordering the EU and Moldova.

This work is further complemented by the secretariat’s cooperation with international environmental organization The Nature Conservancy (TNC), whose EU-recognized methodology for designating renewables acceleration areas informed the development of the Operational Blueprint for the Designation of RAAs in the Energy Community region and now serves as a best practice, the update reads.

Back in 2023, the secretariat and TNC formed a partnership to improve the planning and permitting procedures for renewable energy projects. TNC has implemented projects on RAAs in Serbia, Montenegro.

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CE Oltenia to set up subsidiary to take over coal power plants slated for closure

Romanian state-controlled coal power utility Complexul Energetic Oltenia (CE Oltenia) is preparing to establish a subsidiary to take over its lignite-fired thermal power plants slated for closure and the coal mining operations that supply them.

CE Oltenia’s “lignite subsidiary” is envisaged under a restructuring and decarbonization plan approved by the European Commission, according to Profit.ro.

The subsidiary will incorporate and operate the existing lignite-based power generation units and related assets that are not planned to switch to natural gas or renewable energy sources, according to the European Commission’s decision from 2022 approving state aid for CE Oltenia’s restructuring.

The state aid Romania planned to grant CE Oltenia amounted to EUR 2.66 billion.

The subsidiary will operate coal-fired plants that are not planned to switch to gas or renewables

CE Oltenia’s decision to start the separation of lignite-related activities into a separate subsidiary was adopted as early as 2023, but nothing has been done since then.

Now, the company has launched a procedure to select a consultant and intends to award a contract by winter, with a deadline of about six months for the delivery of services.

The new firm is to be created before the end of CE Oltenia’s restructuring period, i.e. before the end of 2026, according to the commission’s decision. It further states that the lignite capacities in question should decrease over time and eventually be phased out, in accordance with the national coal phase-out timetable.

CE Oltenia is building 550 MW of solar power plants at former coal mines

Earlier this year, a joint venture between CE Oltenia and oil and gas company OMV Petrom signed an agreement with contractors to design and install four solar power plants at former coal mines, with a combined capacity of about 550 MW.

According to Profit.ro, Romanian Energy Minister Bogdan Ivan said last month that Romania was in talks with Brussels on a 5-year postponement of the deadline for closing lignite-fired power plants, envisaged by the country’s National Recovery and Resilience Plan.