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Albania’s ERE sets temporary electricity distribution tariffs for 1 May-31 December 2026

Albania’s Energy Regulatory Authority (ERE), in Board Decision No. 103 dated 14 April 2026, has set temporary electricity distribution tariffs by voltage level for the period 1 May 2026 to 31 December 2026. The decision was adopted under Articles 16, 19 and 20(c) of Law No. 43/2015 on the electricity sector, as amended, along with Decision No. 456 of 29 June 2022 on public service obligations, ERE’s internal regulations, and the tariff methodology for the distribution system operator approved by Decision No. 182 of 10 November 2017.

The authority said it reviewed the distribution operator OSSH’s audited financial statements for 2022-2024, as well as technical, economic and financial projections for 2025-2026, together with the 5-year distribution network development plan for 2023-2027, which ERE began reviewing under Decision No. 308 of 21 November 2025. The report also recalls that ERE’s Decision No. 312 of 12 December 2025 kept the previous distribution tariffs in force until 30 April 2026, based on the ongoing review process and the information OSSH was required to submit.

In its assessment, ERE said that the continuity and security of electricity distribution are critical for uninterrupted and quality service, and that the cost of outages is higher than any other cost component in the electricity supply chain. The regulator also concluded that, on the basis of the actual figures reviewed, the current distribution tariffs generate sufficient revenue to cover operating costs and support the continuity of OSSH’s activity. At the same time, the report notes that the company still needs to improve its capital structure, which remains negative and could create medium-term financial risks.

The report provides several key financial observations. Compared with ERE’s ex-ante approval for 2022, actual operating costs were around 4% lower. In 2023, those costs remained broadly stable, rising by 0.9%, while in 2024 they increased by about 7% compared with 2023. ERE also said it reviewed additional information sent by OSSH by email on 9 April 2026, in response to an ERE request dated 3 June 2026, regarding OPEX fluctuations, material and consumption expenses, and rent.

Based on the corrected required revenues and distributed energy volumes, ERE calculated an average tariff of 5.89 lek/kWh for 2026. On that basis, the temporary distribution tariffs were set at 1.55 lek/kWh for customers connected at 35 kV, 3.99 lek/kWh for customers connected at 0.6-20 kV, and 6.42 lek/kWh for customers connected at 0.4 kV. The applicable reactive energy billing price remains 1.92 lek/kVArh, the same rate approved under Decision No. 73/2022.

ERE said that the WACC and other financial parameters were kept at previous levels because updated information was not available, describing this as a temporary solution that may be reviewed later in line with the legislation in force. The regulator also said the difference between corrected required revenues and realized revenues is relatively small and therefore acceptable for the period under review. ERE added that it reserves the right to fully review OPEX and CAPEX based on actual results in future tariff processes.

The Board also instructed OSSH to keep distribution tariffs unchanged until 31 December 2026, to improve the quality and detail of the information submitted for regulatory purposes, to separate costs and revenues by voltage level, and to align financial reporting with regulatory accounting requirements. OSSH was further asked to provide detailed operating and capital costs, explanations for year-on-year fluctuations, updated financial analysis including WACC, audited 2025 financial statements, and a tariff application for the next regulatory period. The decision entered into force immediately; interested parties may request review within 7 calendar days, and appeals may be filed with the Administrative Court of Tirana within 30 calendar days of publication in the Official Gazette.

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Albania’s 2026 Electricity Law: Powering a Competitive, Secure, and Green Energy Future

The new draft Law on the Electricity Sector (2026) aims to overhaul Albania’s power framework for a competitive, secure and green market. Its stated objectives include guaranteeing secure and sustainable supply, deepening market liberalisation and consumer choice, and supporting climate goals. Government spokespeople emphasize moving “away from a centralized model” toward “a more open, more competitive, more flexible” market aligned with EU norms. Similarly, the Energy Community stresses that Albania must shore up security of supply (through EU-aligned risk-preparedness planning) and fully integrate its electricity market regionally. As one official put it, Albania needs to “shore up security of supply through EU-aligned risk-preparedness plans and achieve full market coupling with the EU”. In line with climate targets (Albania’s 2050 neutrality goal), the law also promotes renewables, efficiency and low-carbon flexibility. For example, a separate 2023 Renewables Law explicitly targets increased renewable use, reduced greenhouse gas emissions and sustainable rural energy access. The 2026 electricity law complements this by facilitating renewables integration (e.g. grid access, storage) while also formalizing consumer-friendly concepts like smart meters and dynamic pricing for a low-carbon economy.

Institutional Framework and the Regulator

A key element is the Energy Regulatory Authority (ERE). Under the draft law, ERE remains the independent regulator for electricity (and gas) with strengthened powers. Official briefings note that the new law “expands and makes more important” ERE’s role, explicitly giving it major competencies “for developing market rules, monitoring their operation and ensuring competition”. In practice, ERE already issues tariffs, licenses, and technical codes; the law likely reaffirms its authority over grid tariffs, network access and licensing. EU rules (Electricity Directive 2019/944 Art.59) require national regulators to be fully independent and impartial, and the Energy Community has advised Albania to “strengthen the independence and capacities of all authorities” including ERE. The draft law reportedly aligns with this: it clearly vests regulatory tasks in ERE, separating them from political control. Nonetheless, implementation depends on ERE’s capacity to handle new duties (e.g. oversight of cross-border markets) and to enforce the complex EU-aligned regime. The law will also designate the energy ministry as the risk-preparedness authority (see below), but ERE is expected to coordinate in emergencies and in implementing EU network codes.

Market Design and Competition

The new law fundamentally repackages the market model. Under the current 2015 law, Albania began liberalising in 2021–2025, opening the market by threshold and establishing the ALPEX exchange. Today, large consumers can choose suppliers, and ALPEX operates a day-ahead and intraday auction. The draft law continues this trend: it formally mandates third-party access to networks and the full operation of wholesale markets (day-ahead, intraday, balancing, and even derivatives trading) to ensure transparent price formation. In April 2023 Albania launched its day-ahead market, which in January 2024 was successfully coupled with Kosovo’s market – the first electricity market coupling in the Energy Community. Regional intraday auctions (so-called CRIDAs) between Albania and Kosovo followed in late 2024. The new law codifies these developments and sets the stage for eventual coupling with EU markets, subject to completing EU-market rules. Indeed, Energy Community analysts note that full alignment with EU rules (the Electricity Integration Package) through this law is essential for Albania to join the EU’s single day-ahead and intraday coupling.

At the same time, the law removes many legacy distortions. The current public service obligations (PSOs) – such as requiring the state generator KESH to supply the universal service provider (FSHU) at a government-set price – will be phased out or restructured. Ministry statements emphasize moving away from a model where “state actors had the largest decision-making” and towards one where competition is the basis of the market. In practice, this means eliminating price-setting interventions: for example, Albania’s wholesale market until now has been burdened by non-market contracts for network losses and for supplying captive consumers, which “does not meet the requirements” of EU market rules. The new law should require all grid services (transmission and distribution losses) to be procured on organized markets under competitive principles. It also formally establishes the market operator (ALPEX) as a Nominated Electricity Market Operator (NEMO) under EU law and extends ALPEX’s remit to ancillary markets. Unbundling is enforced: Albania’s transmission operator (OST) is already ownership-unbundled and ENTSO-E member, and distribution (OSSH) is a separate DSO. Clear rules on independent operation of networks and transparent tariff-setting are included to meet EU requirements.

Renewable Energy Integration and Low-Carbon Transition

Although Albania’s generation is dominated by hydropower, renewable integration is a priority. The new law addresses intermittency and grid flexibility: it introduces concepts like energy storage, active prosumers, aggregation and energy communities. For instance, it explicitly provides a legal basis for energy storage systems (to smooth renewable output) and for “active customers” who both consume and generate power. These mirror EU Directive 2019/944 provisions (articles on prosumers, dynamic tariffs and communities) that Albania has not yet fully transposed. The law also encourages technologies such as smart meters and even electric vehicle charging (“electromobility”) as flexibility tools. A separate Law 24/2023 already incentivises renewable deployment (through auctions, PPAs and CfDs) with the goal of reducing fossil imports and emissions. The electricity law complements this by guaranteeing renewables’ grid access and balancing: for example, under the renewables law temporarily-stored solar power is treated as delivered for subsidy purposes, a useful flexibility clause. In short, the legal framework is shifting to support a low-carbon mix: renewables get priority access to networks, and the market must accommodate their variability via storage and demand-side response. Energy efficiency is implicitly supported through demand participation measures, though detailed efficiency obligations remain part of separate legislation.

Security of Supply and Reliability

Ensuring continuous supply is a core aim. The law reportedly designates the infrastructure minister as the authority for risk preparedness and obliges that ministry to adopt a national risk-preparedness plan. This reflects EU Regulation 2019/941 (on gas supply risks), which Albania had missed implementing by its 2023 deadline. The draft law includes initial steps toward compliance: it provides for a risk plan and emergency protocols. In practice, this means formalising procedures for crisis response, including strategic reserves and demand curtailment rules. The law likely retains provisions for last-resort supply and universal service to protect consumers in shortages: under the current system, for example, the state generator KESH sells power to the universal supplier FSHU and to cover network losses. These contracts (often via contract-for-difference at regulated prices) are to be reformed.

Cross-border integration also enhances security. By coupling with neighbours, Albania gains access to wider regional capacity during droughts. Energy Community officials emphasize that full market coupling with Kosovo and eventually the EU “creates larger, more resilient markets” protecting against shocks. Albania’s new law strengthens this by setting clear rules for allocating cross-border capacity and operating bidding zones. Additional stress on reliability is addressed through mandated reserve capacities and balancing mechanisms: the law provides for the TSO to procure reserves and conduct redispatch if needed.

Nonetheless, challenges remain. Albania’s heavy reliance on hydropower (with seasonal rainfall variability) requires backup sources or storage. The law does not itself build new plants, so its impact on resource adequacy depends on fostering investment. Moreover, while emergency oil-stock regulations remain outdated (outside electricity law’s scope), the focus here is on electricity reserves. Overall, the draft law marks progress toward EU-style security measures, but full implementation will require secondary rules and investments in new capacity (or demand response) to ensure true reliability.

Consumer Rights and Protection

The draft law places consumers at the centre of the market. It acknowledges that consumers can also be producers, and it explicitly incorporates EU ideas of active customers, dynamic pricing contracts and citizen energy communities. In practice, Albania has already liberalized retail supply for most customers: all households and businesses above low-voltage can choose supplier. The state supply company FSHU (formerly OSHEE retail) continues as the universal service provider for small (0.4 kV) customers, and has been designated the supplier of last resort for larger low-voltage customers. Under the new law, these protections persist but in more defined forms. For vulnerable groups, the framework is improving: Albania now defines “energy-poor” and “vulnerable” households, bans disconnection for them, and offers subsidies (for heating and electricity) to the poorest. The law is expected to enshrine such protections, in line with EU norms (Directive 2019/944 requires special safeguards for vulnerable consumers).

However, some consumer-rights provisions must still be fleshed out. The Energy Community notes that novel rights – such as aggregation services, transparent billing, and consumer-driven demand response – have not yet been fully enacted. Similarly, current pricing interventions (like keeping FSHU rates regulated) “do not comply with” EU criteria, implying the law will need transitional rules to liberalize prices over time. To ensure transparency, the law should mandate clear billing, easy switching procedures and robust complaint mechanisms (all EU requirements). In sum, the draft law advances consumer empowerment (even heralding a “democratization” of the sector through communities and active customers), but its effectiveness will hinge on accompanying regulations detailing consumer rights, metering standards, and social safeguards as per EU directives.

Harmonization with EU Energy Acquis

A principal motive is alignment with the EU’s Clean Energy Package. The draft law explicitly aims to fulfill Albania’s energy chapter (15) accession commitments. It transposes key elements of the Electricity Directive and Regulation (2019/944 and 2019/943) – together known as the Electricity Integration Package – which govern market design, unbundling, and cross-border trade. For example, secondary legislation under these acts is already underway: in 2025 ERE approved a capacity allocation regulation (adopting CACM Regulation 2015/1222) to manage congestion. The law also enshrines EU-style unbundling (Albania’s OST was certified under ownership unbundling in 2017) and prepares for implementing remaining EU network codes (intra-day auctions 2017/1719 and balancing code 2017/2195 are in process).

Multiple EU directives come into play. Besides the electricity-specific rules, the law must be consistent with the Renewable Energy Directive (now RED II, 2018/2001, as partially reflected in Law 24/2023) and the Energy Efficiency Directive (2018/2002). It must meet EU requirements on state aid neutrality and competition as well. The Energy Community’s recent report underscores that Albania “should complete transposition of the EIP and… strengthen the independence and capacities of all authorities”. In sum, the 2026 law appears designed to maximize convergence: officials claim it will “ensure a high degree of alignment” with EU law. Yet gaps remain (EU country reports note missing adoption of e.g. Regulation 2019/941 on security of supply). The new law closes many gaps, but full compliance will require follow-up secondary legislation (grid codes, consumer rules, capacity markets) to operationalize EU norms.

Implementation Challenges and Outlook

Achieving the law’s vision will be challenging. Legacy market distortions must be unraveled carefully: KESH’s dominance and the public-service contracts for losses and captive load are deeply entrenched, and removing them could face resistance or temporary supply risks. The Energy Community warned that Albania’s PSOs, originally “temporary measures” during crises, still “threaten to impede efficient competition”. Regulatory capacity is another concern: the new regime is complex, and ERE and the ministry must issue numerous secondary rules (e.g. network codes, imbalance settlement procedures, risk plans) quickly. Reports note that even now, some network code implementations (like 15-minute settlement) have been postponed by ERE.

Integration efforts require investment. Building transmission links (to Greece, Macedonia, Italy) and reinforcing grids for bidirectional flow will determine how well cross-border trade can alleviate domestic shortages. Financing remains an issue: regulators and government must coordinate to fund smart metering and storage projects (as envisaged in the law). Socially, the phase-out of price controls must be balanced with protection for the poor; gaps between this law and existing subsidy programs could cause confusion if not harmonized. Finally, political commitment will be tested: the law’s success depends on steady implementation amid changing governments.

In summary, the draft law sets a forward-looking framework: it promises a liberalized, EU-harmonized market with empowered consumers and high renewable integration. If fully enacted and backed by robust secondary measures, it should significantly advance Albania’s goals of a competitive, secure and sustainable electricity sector. However, the road from law to reality involves filling regulatory gaps and overcoming institutional inertia; without that follow-through, key objectives (market liquidity, EU coupling, consumer protections) may fall short. Overall, the 2026 Electricity Law represents a critical step toward a modern Albanian power market – one that, if implemented effectively, aligns closely with best practices in the EU

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Albania’s Day-Ahead Power Market Is Operational, but Still Not Mature Enough for CfD Support

Albania’s electricity market is making measurable progress, but it is not yet ready to serve as the reference price for modern renewable support mechanisms. That is the central conclusion of ERE’s first assessment of the ALPEX day-ahead market (DAM), which evaluates whether the market is sufficiently liquid and competitive to underpin the future conversion of renewable PPAs into contracts for difference (CfDs). Under Albania’s renewable energy law, ERE is required to carry out such periodic assessments, and it approved the market-readiness methodology in November 2025.

The report’s logic is straightforward: a day-ahead market can only act as a reliable CfD benchmark if it produces a frequent, stable, and credible price signal. To test that, ERE examined price availability, churn, bid-ask spreads, market depth, competition, and the effect of Albania’s coupling with Kosovo. It also benchmarked ALPEX against selected EU markets at the stage when those countries first introduced CfDs, choosing Poland, Hungary, and Croatia as comparators. This approach places Albania in a relevant policy context rather than comparing it with the most mature European exchanges.

The assessment does contain important signs of institutional progress. ALPEX generated a market-clearing price in every hour of the 12-month review period, from 1 November 2024 to 31 October 2025, which satisfies ERE’s criterion for continuous price availability over at least 10 months. The market also appears to be functioning as a shared Albanian-Kosovar trading platform, with coupled prices in more than 99% of hours. In policy terms, that is a meaningful achievement: the market is operational, regional, and capable of producing a continuous price signal.

Yet the core liquidity indicators show that ALPEX remains materially underdeveloped relative to the comparison markets. The churn factor is only 0.102, below HUPX, CROPEX, and TGE, indicating that the ratio of traded volume to total consumption is still weak. The bid-ask spread is also wide: the median is 9.7% of the average market-clearing price, the mean is 17.4%, and the 75th percentile reaches 19.2%. By contrast, the report shows that HUPX had a median spread of just 1.2% and a mean of 3.7%. These figures point to a market that can clear prices, but still struggles to do so efficiently and consistently.

Market depth provides the same message in a different form. ERE finds that in 25% of hours, ALPEX would not have been able to absorb more than about 146 MW of new zero-marginal-cost supply while still maintaining a positive clearing price. That is a critical limitation for a power system that is expected to integrate more renewable generation, especially as photovoltaic capacity continues to expand. In practical terms, the report suggests that the market may face stress at times of low demand or high renewable output, when additional capacity needs a deeper and more resilient trading environment.

Competition is stronger than the liquidity indicators alone might suggest. ERE reports 32 sellers and 33 buyers, with an HHI of 853 on the sell side and 1,220 on the buy side. It interprets this as a competitive sell-side structure and a moderately concentrated buy side. That is an important distinction: the market has participants, but participation has not yet translated into the degree of depth and turnover required for a robust reference price.

The broader policy conclusion is therefore cautious but clear. ALPEX is moving in the right direction, but it is not yet sufficiently liquid to support the transition to CfD-based renewable support. ERE explicitly concludes that the ALPEX DAM is not yet ready to be used as the reference price for support contracts in Albania. At the same time, the report treats this not as a failure, but as a transitional stage: the market has a continuous price signal, a reasonable participant base, and a functioning regional coupling, which are all necessary foundations for future readiness. ERE is expected to continue periodic assessments as the market deepens and matures.

In strategic terms, the report captures Albania’s power-market transition at an important midpoint. The system is no longer at the stage of market creation, but it has not yet reached the level of liquidity, depth, and price stability that would allow it to anchor modern renewable support instruments. For policymakers, the message is that market coupling and institutional setup are advancing faster than commercial liquidity. For investors, especially in renewables, the implication is equally clear: Albania’s market architecture is improving, but the price environment is still not mature enough to be treated as a fully reliable CfD benchmark.

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Albania’s Energy Market Entities Face €4 Million in Regulatory Fees for 2026

Albania’s Energy Regulatory Entity (ERE) has announced that energy market participants across the entire value chain are required to pay a total of 400 million ALL (approximately €4 million) in regulatory fees for the 2026 fiscal year.

The regulator recently published the comprehensive list of obligations for each licensed entity. These fees are calculated based on the previous year’s turnover, adhering to a formula established within the national legal framework for the energy and gas sectors.

Regulatory Compliance and Deadlines

In its official statement, ERE emphasized that any discrepancies identified in the audited financial statements for 2025 will be reconciled in the calculation of regulatory fees for the subsequent period.

Licensed entities subject to this decision are mandated to complete their payments to ERE no later than 30 days following the publication of the decision in the Official Gazette. Failure to meet this deadline will trigger administrative penalties as prescribed by the current legislation governing the energy and natural gas markets.

Exemptions and Fixed-Fee Structures

The regulator also clarified specific conditions under which the standard fee application may vary:

  • Suspensions: Regulatory fees for 2026 have been suspended for a number of entities. This applies to those licensed under specific operating conditions, those currently with a “suspended” status, or entities undergoing liquidation, making active operations or fee collection objectively impossible.

  • Inactive Entities: For licensees that have not yet commenced operations or remained inactive during the prior period, a standard fixed fee of 100,000 ALL has been applied.

  • Consolidated Reporting: A similar fixed fee of 100,000 ALL is levied on companies holding multiple licenses that failed to submit separate financial statements for each activity. In cases where consolidated accounts were provided, the regulatory fee was calculated for one primary activity based on its specific weight, while the fixed fee was applied to the others.

Sector Outlook

The collection of these regulatory fees is a standard procedure designed to fund the operations of the regulatory body, ensuring independent oversight of Albania’s evolving energy market. As the country continues to align its energy sector with European standards, the transparent application of these fees remains a critical component of institutional stability and market fairness.