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Greek company Aktor sets up BESS subsidiary after entering LNG trade

Power storage services are the core activity of Aktor’s new subsidiary Aktor BESS, but it could also build and operate renewable electricity and natural gas–fired plants and enter trade and distribution. The company earlier formed a business with DEPA Trade for liquefied natural gas (LNG).

Greek infrastructure and renewable energy developer and operator Aktor Group has formally positioned itself in the rapidly growing sector of electricity storage. Last week it established a 100% subsidiary called Aktor BESS, with an initial EUR 80,000 in capital.

The firm operates under Aktor Renewables and the main activity is providing electricity storage services. Aktor is apparently aiming to tap into the rapidly growing demand for batteries in Greece amid crippling wind and solar power curtailments.

In addition, battery energy storage systems or BESS are becoming a necessity because of the strengthening cannibalization effect. Operators of photovoltaics and wind parks require more predictable production profiles to for cost-effective pricing. They need to bridge the gaps between peak production and peak demand as well, as subsidies are gradually expiring.

Aktor BESS can benefit from the rapidly growing demand for battery storage in Greece

The statute of Aktor BESS points to a range of possible secondary activities. They include the construction and operation of renewable electricity and natural gas–fired plants as well as power trade and distribution and the development of technical studies.

The BESS facilities can be of the standalone type or colocated with the parent company’s production assets. Aktor Group’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Alexandros Exarchou is also the head of the new firm’s three-member board.

The company earlier established a joint venture for LNG and gas trade with DEPA Commercial, which controls 40%. It is also known as DEPA Emporias (in Greek), DEPA Commerce and DEPA Trading.

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Greece’s DEPA joins forces with Clavenia to build 792 MW gas power plant

A Greek-Israeli consortium has signed an agreement to build a 792 MW gas power plant in Larissa, Greece, in an investment valued at EUR 600 million. The facility will use an advanced combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) technology, enabling a net thermal efficiency of 62.6%.

The proposed gas power plant is expected to be the most efficient CCGT facility in the country. It will utilize Mitsubishi Heavy Industries’ advanced technology, specifically M 701JAC, according to a statement by Greek state-controlled gas supplier and trader DEPA Commercial, one of the partners in the consortium.

The Larissa plant is expected to be the most efficient CCGT facility in Greece

The project is led by Clavenia, registered in Cyprus but with Israeli ownership. It has a 38.5% stake. The other three stakeholders are based in Greece – DEPA Commercial, with 35%, energy investment fund EUSIF Larissa, with 16.5%, and local retail electricity supplier Volton, with 10%.

A final investment decision is expected by the end of 2025, and construction would begin in early 2026. All required permits have already been secured. DEPA revealed it would be responsible for the commercial supply of natural gas for the operation of the plant.

The project could be expanded to include a data center, energy storage, and hydrogen

Clavenia plans to expand the project by developing a broader energy hub in the region, including battery storage facilities, a data center, and potentially hydrogen production and carbon capture technologies, according to Energypress.

Nissan Caspi, managing partner at Clavenia, described the Larissa project as the first phase of a broader plan, incorporating innovative Israeli technologies, such as hydrogen storage, green methanol production, and lithium ion batteries.

DEPA is already building a CCGT plant in Greece of 840 MW

DEPA, in partnership with state-controlled Public Power Corp. (PPC), is building an 840 MW gas power plant in Greece using CCGT technology. It is also involved in a project for a gas-fired power plant in Albania, together with Greece-based GEK Terna and Albanian firm Gener 2.

The company owns 20% of the Alexandroupolis LNG Terminal and 25% of ICGB, which operates the Interconnector Greece-Bulgaria (IGB) gas pipeline.

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Project for first gas power plant in Albania enters next stage

In partnership with domestic company Gener 2, Greece-based GEK Terna and DEPA Commercial are preparing to build the first gas power plant in Albania. The current phase involves seeking financing. Separately, Azerbaijan’s SOCAR is expected to start installing the first gas distribution network in Albania, in the city of Korça.

Albania is almost 100% dependent on hydropower plants in domestic electricity production. Efforts are underway to diversify the mix with solar and wind energy and introduce storage capacities. Actually, not a single wind turbine has been built yet, but there is another opportunity for strengthening the energy supply: with gas from the Trans Adriatic Pipeline – TAP. Greek conglomerate GEK Terna and state-owned gas supplier, importer and trader DEPA Commercial intend to build the first gas power plant in Albania, with a local partner.

Late last year, the Council of Ministers, the country’s government, approved the project and determined a three-year deadline for completion. The site for the gas plant is in the municipality of Roskovec in Fier in western Albania. Notably, the county attracts most solar power projects in the country.

Gas facility in western Albania reportedly to have 147 MW in capacity

In the current project development phase, Fier Thermoelectric, the joint venture, is seeking financing, Insider.gr reported. The facility is envisaged to have 147 MW in capacity, according to the article. The government’s decision was for 170 MW.

DEPA Commercial, also known as DEPA Emporias (in Greek), DEPA Commerce and DEPA Trading, entered the project in 2023. It took over a 35% stake from GEK Terna and signed a seven-year gas supply contract for the proposed facility.

They have equal ownership, while Albanian company Gener 2 holds the remaining 30%. It is active in construction, infrastructure, civil works, energy, real estate development, telecommunications and retail in Albania and the broader region.

Both GEK Terna and Gener 2 have solar power projects in Albania as well

Gener 2 has submitted a 50 MW solar power project to the government a year ago. The location is in Bistrica in Finiq municipality, Vlora district.

The government’s approval is not for a concession, but the operator is obligated to either deliver 2% of electricity it produces, as royalty – royal right, or give an equivalent sum for the state budget. The permit is for 49 years since the entry of the decision into force. The firm also needs to sell a share of output to the public power supplier, in accordance with the country’s law.

A group of residents of surrounding villages has repeatedly protested against the investment, arguing that they weren’t consulted. The locals even filed a criminal complaint against Roskovec Mayor Majlinda Bufi.

They claim that the gas facility would pollute the area and jeopardize public health while exporting 90% of the produced electricity.

GEK Terna to benefit from synergies with its gas power plants in Greece

GEK Terna has three gas-fired power plants in Greece. The group’s other energy investment in Albania, through its subsidiary Heron, isn’t without controversy either.

The project is for a 93 MW photovoltaic plant in Libohova, near the Greek border, in Gjirokastër county. Project firm Faethon won approval from the Council of Ministers in Tirana in early 2024. It would be valid for up to 49 years.

GEK Terna’s solar power plant project in Gjirokastër was disrupted last year over fake documentation

Local press wrote last summer that some land documentation for the 122-hectare area was forged, prompting a raid and arrests in the cadastral office in Gjirokastër. The operator of the Libohova plant is obligated to deliver 2% of its electricity for free, too.

First gas distribution network in Albania about to be built in Korça

Albania aims to become a net electricity exporter before the end of the decade. There is also a project for a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal in the port city of Vlora, where a gas-fired power plant is planned to be built.

A long-awaited project called Nur, for the gasification of Korça, was presented last week. It would be the first city in Albania with gas.

The final investment decision is expected this year. State Oil Company of Azerbaijan (SOCAR) would be tasked with implementation, with financing from its government. The estimated cost is EUR 21 million. The idea is to then expand the local gas distribution network to nearby Pogradec and Erseka.

Fier and Elbasan are next on the schedule. Azerbaijan and its company are also interested in the project for the LNG terminal in Vlora and to connect the facility with TAP.

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Greece’s DEPA Commercial picks contractors for PV plants of 500 MW

Construction companies Terna and Aktor are about to start building a solar power plant of 400 MW in northern Greece and another 100 MW near Larissa, for state-owned DEPA Commercial, according to a new report. In its switch toward cleaner sources, the gas holding has also finished the construction of its biomethane plant.

Greek state-controlled gas supplier, importer and trader DEPA Commercial has completed the tenders for photovoltaic parks of 500 MW overall, OT learned. The 400 MW facility in Kozani in the Western Macedonia province would currently be the largest in the country.

However, Lightsource bp, owned by BP, started the construction of a 560 MW solar park last summer in Central Greece and Thessaly. State-controlled Public Power Corp. (PPC or DEI) is about to finish a 550 MW photovoltaic facility in Ptolemaida, near Kozani.

DEPA Commercial is also known as DEPA Emporias (in Greek), DEPA Commerce and DEPA Trading. Both for the giant PV plant in northern Greece and another 100 MW in Farsala, Larissa, it selected the consortium of Terna, part of the GEK Terna conglomerate, and Ellaktor’s Aktor.

The turnkey deals are worth EUR 270 million in total

The turnkey agreements are worth a combined EUR 270 million. The company obtained a EUR 390 million loan in July from the European Investment Bank (EIB) for its photovoltaic projects. The portfolio amounted to 816 MW.

The projects, which are at various stages of maturity, are conducted under subsidiaries North Solar, North Solar 1 and New Spes Concept.

DEPA Commercial’s new move comes after the government bought a 35% stake from Helleniq Energy. The company is now fully owned by the Hellenic Republic Asset Development Fund (HRADF or TAIPED). The transaction was completed at the turn of the year, when the vehicle also integrated the so-called Superfund.

DEPA Commercial starts producing biomethane for its fuel stations

Within its energy transition efforts, the gas giant is entering biomethane production as well. DEPA Commercial said early this month that it produced Greece’s first quantities of the fuel.

The new pilot unit, Farma Hitas (Chitas) in Filippiada in the country’s west, makes 97% pure methane and compresses it. The bio-CNG goes to the company’s Fisikon gas stations, where it is mixed with natural (fossil) gas and sold as vehicle fuel.

Ownership stakes in Alexandroupolis gas complex, IGB pipeline

As for its conventional business operations, DEPA Commercial holds a 29% stake in special purpose firm Ilektroparagogi Alexandroupolis (Alexandroupolis Electricity Production). PPC is the majority partner, with 71%.

They are building a combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) of 840 MW. In addition, DEPA Commercial owns 20% of the Alexandroupolis LNG Terminal and 25% of ICGB, which operates the Interconnector Greece-Bulgaria (IGB) gas pipeline.

The company is participating in the Fier Thermoelectric project for a 174 MW gas power plant in Albania. DEPA Commercial intends to supply some of the renewable electricity that it generates to its wholly-owned subsidiary Fysiko Aerio – Hellenic Energy Co. The gas and electricity distributor has more than 530,000 customers.

Notably, DEPA Commercial already owns an aggregator license – FOSE, allowing it to trade in the wholesale power market on behalf of a group of producers.