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Price of residential battery storage in Europe drops over 50% in two years

The mature residential battery storage markets in Europe are stabilizing, while policy-driven and emerging markets are gaining traction, according to EUPD Research. Its new report showed prices of home batteries slumped more than 50% between the first half of 2023 and the first half of this year.

The European residential battery storage market has remained resilient in 2025, with notable growth across mid-sized and emerging markets, according to EUPD Research’s latest Electrical Energy Storage (EES) Report. It tracked systems of up to 20 kWh.

While mature markets such as Germany and Italy began the year with more subdued figures, the overall market trajectory points to continued expansion, with over one million new residential storage systems expected to be installed across Europe this year. Although the phaseout of subsidies and adjustments to support schemes led to a weaker start in top markets, the outlook for the second half is more optimistic, the firm said.

Home batteries are overwhelmingly intended for storing electricity from household photovoltaic systems, usually installed on roofs, balconies or on canopies next to houses.

Dynamic electricity tariffs, self-consumption fueling residential battery storage push

Increasing interest in dynamic electricity tariffs and enhanced self-consumption is expected to stimulate demand for residential market storage. Mature markets are stabilizing, while policy-driven and emerging markets are gaining traction, the update showed.

The sector continues to benefit from falling battery prices. A significant drop in lithium prices, combined with intensified competition due to the influx of new market players in the past two years, has accelerated price erosion and reduced overall system costs.

The data provider’s price index more than halved between the first half of 2023 and the first half of this year. The current average selling price of residential battery storage, in the second half of 2025, came in at EUR 711 per kWh. It is 46.6% lower than in the first half of 2023.

The segment of newly installed residential battery storage in Germany is in a moderate decline

Despite a moderate decline in residential battery installations during the first half of 2025, Germany remains the strongest market in Europe, with demand expected to stay resilient throughout the year. The projected 6% year-on-year decline is mainly due to slower deployment of photovoltaics, reduced regional incentives, and a growing shift in focus toward commercial and industrial (C&I) and utility-scale storage.

Alongside Italy, Germany is estimated to account for the lion’s share of new residential storage capacity additions through 2028, despite Italy’s current slowdown amid the gradual weakening of the Superbonus scheme.

This year’s residential battery storage additions in Europe’s largest economy are seen at 4.7 GWh, compared to a projected 6.04 GW in home PV installations of up to 20 kW. Italy accounts for an expected 1.24 GWh and 1.44 GW, respectively.

Steady, robust growth in several markets

Markets such as Austria, France, the Netherlands, and the Czech Republic are demonstrating steady and robust growth, driven by rising electricity costs since 2023, increasing PV adoption, stable policy support, and increased awareness of the benefits of energy independence.

Sweden, bolstered by tax rebates and a national push toward energy self-sufficiency, has seen a record number of PV systems being installed with residential storage.

As for equipment providers, BYD maintained its top position in 2024, capturing a 20% market share, which is expected to reach 21% this year.

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Sunotec, Sungrow sign 2.4 GWh battery storage agreement

China-based Sungrow and Bulgarian-German company Sunotec have agreed to install 2.4 GWh of battery energy storage systems (BESS) in Europe.

Sunotec and Sungrow have signed a strategic agreement to deploy 2.4 GWh of battery energy storage systems (BESS) across multiple solar power projects in Europe, according to Sunotec.

The 2.4 GWh of energy storage capacity will support grid stability, enable better renewable energy integration, and enhance the reliability of solar parks developed and constructed by Sunotec throughout Bulgaria and wider Europe.

The portfolio includes several large-scale projects across Bulgaria, which will serve energy storage needs, the update reads. Some of the projects in the pipeline will be supported by funds under Bulgaria’s RESTORE national support program.

Velichkov: The next chapter of clean energy

Sungrow intends to supply its industry-leading PowerTitan 2.0 BESS, recognized globally as a top-tier solution for utility-scale applications, while the string inverter SG350HX-20 and Sungrow’s MVS will be used for a hybrid project (PV and BESS) in the portfolio. It would be the first BESS project in Bulgaria with Sungrow technology.

“The global energy transition depends not only on how much renewable power we produce, but on how intelligently we manage and store it,” Sunotec CEO Kaloyan Velichkov said.

The partnership with Sungrow, in his words, reflects shared ambition to lead the next chapter of clean energy – by building resilient, storage-enabled infrastructure that brings stability, sustainability, and scale to markets across Europe and beyond.

Gkinis: The deal is a cornerstone of the two companies’ mission to accelerate clean energy deployment in Bulgaria and Europe

According to Anastasios Gkinis, Regional Director of Sungrow for CEE, SEE and CIS, the collaboration with Sunotec is a cornerstone of his company’s mission to accelerate clean energy deployment in Bulgaria and across Europe.

“Combining Sungrow’s cutting-edge energy storage technology with Sunotec’s execution excellence, we create a powerful force to redefine the energy landscape in Bulgaria and support the region’s transition to a sustainable energy future,” he stressed.

Sunotec has delivered over 650 solar projects with a total installed PV capacity of 11 GW. As of December 2024, Sungrow has installed 740 GW of power electronic converters worldwide, the update reads.

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Faria Renewables secures financing for 49.9 MW battery project in Greece

Faria Renewables has signed a loan agreement with Attica Bank for the construction of a battery energy storage system (BESS). The project is worth EUR 28 million. In addition, Cero Generation passed a milestone toward a 250 MW battery storage investment.

A BESS project selected last year in Greece’s second battery storage auction is now a step closer to materialization, Faria Renewables revealed. The company signed a loan deal with Attica Bank for the construction of the system. It would have 49.9 MW in capability and a capacity of 134.2 MWh.

The investment is worth EUR 28 million, the company added. Its first BESS unit, for which it earlier signed a contract with Huawei, would be connected to a 150/20 kV substation, currently under construction. Construction is expected to be completed before the end of September, the update adds.

BESS project benefitting from EU funds

The project is being implemented under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan Greece 2.0, with funding from the European Union – the NextGenerationEU and its Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF) segment.

“Our collaboration with Attica Bank for the implementation of this significant energy storage project marks another crucial step in delivering sustainable energy solutions that support the country’s energy transition goals. We share a common vision to contribute to a greener society by designing and carrying out energy solutions that combine expertise, sustainability, and innovation,” Faria Renewables’ Chair and Chief Executive Officer Thalia Valkouma stated.

The renewables and energy storage developer has a portfolio in Greece exceeding 3 GW. It said it is exploring opportunities in new markets in Europe.

One of largest energy storage investments in Greece

According to Attica Bank’s Chief of Asset and Specialized Financing Christos Iliopoulos, the new agreement is for one of the largest investments in the energy storage sector in Greece.

“Attica Bank remains strategically committed to supporting the green transition and energy security of the country by financing projects that enhance the transformation and resilience of the energy system. Our partnership with Faria Renewables for the construction of a storage project is fully aligned with this philosophy,” he said.

The investment will help the integration of renewable sources into the national grid and enhance system flexibility, the announcement reads.

Greece has held a series of three auctions for subsidizing standalone BESS to get the market segment rolling, on the path toward its 2030 target of 4.7 GW.

Cero Generation makes progress toward 250 MW battery storage investment

In other news, Cero Generation Holdings, a subsidiary of Macquarie Asset Management, won an approval from Greece’s Ministry of the Environment and Energy for five BESS stations. Each would have 50 MW in operating power and 153 MWh in effective capacity (or 170 MWh nominally).

Project firms Energy Ventures 6 and Energy Ventures 10, in which Cero Generation holds 85%, received environmental terms (AEPO) for the proposed investment in Pelinnaioi, in the municipality of Farkadona in Trikala, Thessaly.

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IRENA: 91% of new renewables units are more cost-effective than fossil fuel alternatives

The fossil fuel age is crumbling, according to UN Secretary-General António Guterres. Renewables maintained their cost leadership in global power markets, the International Renewable Energy Agency said in an annual report. In 2024, onshore wind farms were the cheapest of all versus the lowest-cost fossil fuel alternatives, by 53% on average, while photovoltaic systems were 41% cheaper.

Onshore wind power was also the cheapest in levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) terms, followed by solar power. At the same time, 91% of newly commissioned utility-scale capacity was delivering power at a cost lower than for the cheapest electricity from new fossil fuel–fired units.

The Renewable Power Generation Costs in 2024 report confirmed the price advantage of renewables over fossil fuels, with cost declines driven by technological innovation, competitive supply chains and economies of scale, the International Renewable Energy Agency said. IRENA expects cost reductions to continue, but highlighted the short-term challenges.

Geopolitical shifts including trade tariffs, raw material bottlenecks, and evolving manufacturing dynamics, particularly in China, could temporarily raise costs.

Asia, Africa and South America, with stronger learning rates and high renewable potential, could see pronounced cost declines.

Higher costs are likely to persist in Europe and North America, driven by structural challenges such as permitting delays, limited grid capacity, and higher balance-of-system expenses, according to the update. In contrast, regions like Asia, Africa and South America, with stronger learning rates and high renewable potential, could see pronounced cost declines.

The organization pointed to the need for stable and predictable revenue frameworks to lower investment risk and attract capital.

“Clean energy is smart economics – and the world is following the money,” United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres stressed. In his view, the fossil fuel age is crumbling.

Capital costs inflating LCOE in developing countries

Mitigating financing risk is central to scaling renewables in both mature and emerging markets. Instruments such as power purchase agreements (PPAs) play a pivotal role in accessing affordable finance, while inconsistent policy environments and opaque procurement processes undermine investor confidence, IRENA added.

In many developing countries of the Global South, high capital costs, influenced by macroeconomic conditions and perceived investment risks, significantly inflate the levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) of renewables.

Onshore wind power production cheapest by far of all kinds of electricity

In 2024, onshore wind farms were the cheapest of all versus the lowest-cost fossil fuel alternatives, by 53% on average, while photovoltaic facilities were 41% cheaper. Of note, the cost of battery energy storage systems (BESS) declined by 93% from 2010 to 2024, to USD 192 per kWh.

Onshore wind remained the most affordable source of new renewable electricity, with a global weighted average LCOE at USD 0.034 per kWh (USD 34 per MWh), followed by new solar, at USD 0.043 per kWh, and new hydropower plants, USD 0.057 per kWh.

Again per the levelized cost of electricity, 91% of newly commissioned utility-scale renewables capacity was delivering power at a lower cost than the most affordable new fossil fuel–based units.

That said, LCOE increased slightly for solar power, by 0.6%. Onshore wind power was 3% more expensive than in 2023, compared to 4% for offshore wind and 13% for the bioenergy segment. Meanwhile, costs declined for concentrated solar power (CSP), by 46%, followed by electricity from geothermal units, 16%, and hydropower, which slipped 2%.

Solar and wind energy prices have begun to stabilize, which is a natural sign of market maturity, the authors underscored.

Photo: Renewable energy LCOE 2010-2024, in United States dollars per kilowatt-hour (IRENA)

Clear path to affordable, secure, sustainable energy

The addition of 582 GW of renewables capacity in 2024 led to significant cost savings, avoiding fossil fuel use valued at about USD 57 billion, new data shows. Looking at all renewables in operation, the avoided fossil fuel costs in 2024 reached up to USD 467 billion, IRENA’s Director-General Francesco La Camera stated.

New renewable power outcompetes fossil fuels on cost, offering a clear path to affordable, secure and sustainable energy, he pointed out.

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Pexapark: PPA activity in Europe drops in first half of 2025

The number of power purchase agreements (PPAs) for renewables in Europe fell by 31% and the volume tumbled 26% in the first half of the year from the levels in the same period of 2024, Pexapark found. Germany and France registered sharp declines in the photovoltaics segment, but a surge in Italy and Spain has more than offset the drop.

The meteoric rise in deals for battery energy storage systems, BESS, is a clear sign of its maturity.

In its latest report, analytics and advisory firm Pexapark provided a detailed look into PPAs and contracts for battery energy storage systems in the first six months of 2025. It found that PPA activity shrank by more than a quarter in year-over-year terms, but not everywhere and not due to solar power.

Across 124 deals, 6.08 GW of renewable electricity capacity was contracted in the first half, which is 31% and 26% down, respectively, from the same period of 2024. Conversely, the average deal size advanced 5% to 48.2 MW.

Notably, the April-June period was much weaker than the first quarter of the year, with just 50 deals, but the volumes were almost evenly split.

The main technologies in the first half were solar power, 4.2 GW from 73 deals, onshore wind (1.4 GW and 32 PPAs), mixed technology (290 MW and nine deals) and offshore wind (134 MW and four deals). The result is proportionate to the picture from January through June 2024.

Despite concerns over saturation of demand for standalone solar, volumes have firmed. The 4.2 GW of solar capacity contracted under PPAs compares to 3.9 GW of the first half of last year. The deal count landed at 73, against 95, which is in line with the overall trend.

PPA activity in Germany plunged 84% in terms of volume

Solar offtake activity reveals a clear split in market momentum. It is slowing down in markets where cannibalization has worsened drastically and rapidly – such as Germany and France. In fact, Germany saw the largest decline in volumes – a remarkable 84% year-on-year decrease in terms of overall volumes, with 228 MW across eight deals in the last six months, versus 1.2 GW and 31 deals in last year’s equivalent.

There is stable or even upward appetite in markets which have had time to adjust to cannibalization and the lower valuation of solar production, or where cannibalization levels are still very low

Conversely, solar PPA activity in Italy and Spain spiked, more than making up for the said decline.

“These numbers support the hypothesis that there is stable, or even upward appetite in markets which have had time to adjust to cannibalization and the lower valuation of solar production – i.e., Spain, or cannibalization levels are still very low – such as Italy. Italy’s solar PPA volumes grew 184% year-on-year, with nearly an additional 700 MW procured compared to the same period last year. Corporate appetite in the country is growing, and so is deal size – with a 420 MW solar corporate deal announced in June comprising the country’s largest PPA ever recorded,” the analysis reads.

As for Southeastern Europe, OMV Petrom’s deal with Enery for their joint solar power project Gabare in Bulgaria was Europe’ third-largest PPA in June.

Flexibility monetization is opportunity for market players with right profile

In a market increasingly driven by flexibility monetization, today’s challenges – cannibalization, future capture dynamics and balancing risks – are becoming opportunities for market players with the right profile. And with corporate buyers more hesitant to pay premiums for solar, transactable prices are—perhaps for the first time in a while – closer to perceived fair value, according to the report’s authors.

Wholesale electricity prices in Sweden were negative for almost two fifths of the time in the first six months of 2025

Hourly periods with negative prices at wholesale electricity markets continued strong in the first half. Sweden maintained its top position by far, with most such events. There were 1,635 hours with negative prices from January until the end of June. It is a stunning 37.8% share of the entire period and already 63% of the tally from all last year.

The other jurisdictions that make up the top five in Europe: Finland, Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium, remained the same since 2024.

On average, European countries have already reached around 67% of the number of hours counted in 2024 as a whole. Norway hit 90%, Denmark 87% and Spain climbed to 86%, suggesting that last year’s records would fall.

Top five European markets by number of negative price hours, 2024 vs. the first half of 2025

BESS deal volumes already three times higher than in all 2024

The maturity of the BESS industry is clearly reflected in the deal count and contracted volumes over the past 18 months, with the trend increasingly pronounced in 2025.

Battery storage capacity being contracted under optimization or fixed-revenue offtake contracts (so-called floors and tolls, respectively) amounted to a total of 4.6 GW in capability and 9.2 GWh in capacity across 36 deals. It is just over three times more than in entire 2024 in both benchmarks. The deal count was 44% up from all last year.

The lion’s share of the deal count concerns BESS assets with a two-hour duration

The rapid growth was driven by a wave of new agreements in the two most advanced markets – Great Britain and Germany – alongside first-ever BESS deals emerging in Belgium, Poland, Greece, and Bulgaria. The lion’s share of the deal count concerns BESS assets with a two-hour duration, which the ratio of operating power and capacity also indicates.

Pexapark provides of price data, market intelligence, and advisory services for renewable energy. It was one of the knowledge partners at this year’s edition of Belgrade Energy Forum, organized by Balkan Green Energy News.

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Bulgarian battery factory Exeron X-BESS gets EU strategic status

Bulgaria-based International Power Supply (IPS) is opening a factory for battery energy storage systems using proprietary technology. The Exeron X-BESS is one of only six strategic projects in the European Union with a designation under the Net Zero Industry Act.

Minister of Economy and Industry of Bulgaria Petar Dilov met with Chief Executive Officer of International Power Supply (IPS) Alexander Rangelov, as the company’s investment in the production of BESS entered the EU’s public registry of strategic projects under NZIA. It is one of only six endeavors that made it to the list so far.

The Exeron X-BESS factory will put Bulgaria on the world map for the production of battery energy storage technologies, the ministry said. It is fully aligned with the NZIA goals for secure and sustainable supply of net zero emission technologies and the expansion of production capacities and supply chains, it added.

Exeron X-BESS to become key factor in EU’s clean technology chain

The government is promoting energy efficiency and the security of supply for industrial production in Bulgaria, especially in the segment of zero emission technologies, Dilov stresed. “The project is an important step towards including Bulgaria among European producers of environmental technologies and the implementation of high-tech solutions to mitigate climate change,” the minister stated.

He expressed the belief that the project would become a key factor in the clean technology chain. It is a step forward for Bulgaria’s participation in the European and global industry that is transforming the energy sector, Dilov pointed out.

The X-BESS line includes a battery management system developed by IPS

IPS has patented the entire Exeron X-BESS technology. Production should begin in the autumn. The facility is in the Hemus high-tech industrial park in Kremikovtzi (Kremikovtsi) near Sofia.

The project entails the creation of 65 jobs by the end of the year, of which a quarter would be in development and engineering. Two thirds of the employees would be technical specialists.

The majority owner of IPS, with 65.5%, is Power Technology Investment Group. It is controlled by the family of the founder Stoil Rangelov Trifonov. SIL Energy Invest has 31.5%. The Capital Investments Fund (CIFund) of the Bulgarian Development Bank holds the remaining 3%.

The company mainly uses European parts and the lithium-iron-phosphate (LFP) battery cells are from China. IPS has a proprietary battery management system (BMS) for the X-BESS line.

NZIA is fast-tracking permits for strategic projects

The NZIA designation secures a priority status at the national level for all administrative processes, faster permitting including environmental approvals, and advice on financing.

Of the six projects in the list, three are in Germany. Carbon2Business and MoReTec are for the decarbonization of a cement plant and chemicals production, respectively, while the one branded Resilience develops renewable energy technologies.

The remaining two are located in Sweden. NKT HV Cables AB is an endeavor for new electricity grid technologies including electric charging for transportation and grid digitalization solutions. The Talga Battery ANODE Refinery ONE is the only other project in the battery and energy storage segment.

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Electrica sells green bonds for EUR 500 million amid record demand

Electricity supplier and distributor Electrica listed its first green bonds on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange. It was the largest issuance of its kind among Romanian companies, excluding financials.

Electrica, in which the Romanian Government controls a stake of just under 50%, issued green bonds worth up to EUR 500 million. It is using the proceeds to finance and refinance its projects, mainly for green energy production and energy storage.

The senior unsecured green bonds, maturing in five years, are now listed on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange. Admission to trading on the Bucharest Stock Exchange is estimated to take place at the beginning of August, Electrica said.

The company’s core activities are electricity distribution and supply and energy services, but it is expanding into renewables and battery storage.

Pricing reaches 2.3 percentage points above benchmark rate

Credit appraisal agency Fitch has assigned the 4.375% senior unsecured green notes a BBB- rating. It is the lowest investment grade. The projects will have a limited connection to Electrica’s 100%-owned distribution and supply subsidiaries Distribuție Energie Electrică Romania (DEER) and Electrica Furnizare, the note adds.

Electrica targets 1 GW of installed renewable energy capacity by 2030 alongside the deployment of 900 MWh of energy storage

The company’s inaugural debt securities were priced at a yield of 4.566%, according to a regulatory filing. It was 2.3 percentage points above the benchmark mid-interest rate swap. The demand from investors at the final price exceeded the supply by more than 11.5 times, marking a record oversubscription in bond issuances of Romanian companies, Electrica pointed out.

Moreover, it was the largest green bond issuance in Romania excluding financial institutions. Electrica targets 1 GW of installed capacity by 2030 alongside the deployment of 900 MWh of energy storage.

Electrica grows market capitalization by one fifth this year

Banca Comercială Română (member of Erste Group), BNP Paribas, Citi, ING, J.P. Morgan and Raiffeisen Bank International were the joint global coordinators and joint bookrunners in the transaction, while BT Capital Partners, IMI-Intesa Sanpaolo, Société Générale and UniCredit were joint bookrunners.

Electrica has EUR 1.06 billion in market capitalization. Its shares surged 21.1% since the end of last year.

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China-based Envision opens world’s largest green hydrogen, ammonia plant

Green technology developer Envision Energy has commissioned the world’s largest and most advanced green hydrogen and ammonia plant. The Shanghai-based company said the production facility, developed in its hydrogen park in Chifeng, China, is also the first in the world delivering green ammonia at industrial scale and the first of its kind to be fully AI-enabled.

The plant can deliver 320,000 tons of green ammonia annually, with exports set to begin in the fourth quarter of this year, Envision said, adding that the facility represents a major leap forward in industrial decarbonization. By 2028, the output is projected to rise to 1.5 million tons a year.

Green ammonia output is expected to rise to 1.5 million tons a year by 2028

The project, powered by Envision’s proprietary off-grid renewable energy system, applies innovative energy storage and load flexibility. Surplus green power is stored in the form of liquid nitrogen, and electrolyzers intelligently respond to renewable power swings, dynamically optimizing energy absorption and ammonia production.

By leveraging green ammonia as a stable transportation and storage medium, Envision has unlocked a practical path to scaling hydrogen across heavy industries, reads the press release.

Zhang Lei, Envision’s founder and CEO, noted that scalable, green alternatives are now real and operational, adding that the world cannot reach net zero without green hydrogen.

The first offtake deal is accelerating green ammonia adoption in fertilizer production, chemicals, and shipping

Envision’s project has already concluded a long-term offtake agreement with Marubeni Corporation, one of Japan’s largest trading houses, which will accelerate green ammonia adoption in sectors including fertilizers, chemicals, and shipping.

The company announced that its Chifeng Hydrogen Net Zero Industrial Park is officially the world’s first green ammonia facility to receive the ISCC PLUS certification for green ammonia with a verified greenhouse gas footprint. Envision also noted that its plant has a replicable design that can be quickly deployed globally.

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Visual Fan to install BESS facility of 65 MWh for Renovatio Trading

Visual Fan will install a 65 MWh energy storage for Renovatio Trading in Toplița in Romania’s Harghita county.

The batteries market in Romania is very active these days.

The battery energy storage system  (BESS) will be built by Allview Energy, Visual Fan’s division specialized in the development of large-scale photovoltaic parks, including storage capacities.

It is the first major contract for the implementation of a power storage system, Allview said.

The contract is valued at EUR 9.2 million. It is set to be implemented in association with partners Enersec Technology and TQM Services.

The implementation period for the contract is seven months

The project includes state-of-the-art technologies in terms of batteries and energy flow control, according to Allview.

The implementation period is seven months. The deal includes all stages of the project – engineering, procurement and execution, full integration into the energy system and the successful completion and testing.

The goal is to help balance the national grid and accelerate the integration of green energy into daily consumption, Allview added.

“The signing of this contract marks a defining moment in Visual Fan’s development journey, reflecting the company’s strategic maturity and the market’s growing confidence in our skills. Since the end of 2024 and the beginning of 2025, the company has entered a new stage of consolidation and expansion, by attracting major projects, which validate the management’s strategic vision, the team’s expertise and the ability to implement complex solutions on a large scale,” said Christina Munteanu, Economic Director of Visual Fan.

Peticilă: Thec ontract is a confirmation of the active role that Visual Fan has in Romania’s energy future

According to Visual Fan CEO Lucian Peticilă, the signing of the contract is a confirmation of the company’s strategic vision and the active role it has in Romania’s energy future.

Visual Fan is happy to build this path together with Renovatio Trading, guided by the same vision: a clean, balanced and sustainable energy future for Romania, he added.

Of note, a few days ago the National Energy Regulatory Authority of Romania (ANRE) approved a regulation eliminating double taxation of energy storage, to accelerate the deployment of solutions for storing electricity.

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Solar beats nuclear in June, becoming EU’s biggest electricity source for first time

Solar became the EU’s largest source of electricity for the first time in June 2025. National records for both photovoltaics and wind rolled in in May and June, pushing coal to an all-time low.

Solar was the largest source of electricity in the European Union for the first time last month, with multiple countries producing record amounts of solar power, Ember found. Wind power achieved the highest ever generation for the months of May and June, the think tank said.

Solar power generated 22.1% of EU electricity (45.4 TWh) in June, more than any other power source. It was a year-over-year increase of 22%. In second place was nuclear, with 21.8% (44.7 TWh), followed by wind, with 15.8% (32.4 TWh).

The big opportunity now comes from adding battery storage and flexibility to extend the use of renewable power into mornings and evenings, where fossil fuels still set high power prices, according to Ember’s Senior Energy analyst Chris Rosslowe.

At least thirteen EU countries set monthly solar records

At least thirteen countries recorded their highest-ever month of solar generation, amid an ongoing surge in photovoltaic installations. Among them were Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Slovenia and Romania, all the EU countries in the region that Balkan Green Energy News is focused on except Cyprus, for which there was no data for June.

Wind power reached an all-time high shares of 16.6% (33.7 TWh) and 15.8% (32.4 TWh) in May and June, respectively

Strong photovoltaic output helped the power system to handle higher levels of demand resulting from heatwaves that gripped the continent towards the end of the month, according to the report.

Wind farms generated 16.6% (33.7 TWh) and 15.8% (32.4 TWh) of EU electricity in May and June, respectively. It was an all-time high for both months. Notably, at the start of the year, wind conditions were relatively poor. They improved, and they were the main driver, though capacity has been continuously growing over the past year. Several large offshore wind farms were commissioned.

Coal falls to record low

As a result of high renewables generation in June, coal had the lowest-ever share of EU electricity. Total fossil generation was also low, but it grew in the entire first half of the year on an annual basis.

Coal generated just 6.1% (12.6 TWh) of EU electricity in June, down from the 8.8% registered in the same month of last year.

The two countries that account for the vast majority of EU coal power (79% in June) both saw record lows in June. Namely, Germany generated just 12.4% (4.8 TWh) of its power from coal, and Poland 42.9% (5.1 TWh). Four other countries recorded their lowest-ever month of coal generation in June: Czechia (17.9%), Bulgaria (16.7%), Denmark (3.3%) and Spain (0.6%), which is approaching its coal phaseout.

Fossil fuels generated 23.6% (48.5 TWh) of EU electricity in June, just above the record low of 22.9% in May 2024. Nevertheless, fossil generation in the first half of 2025 was 13% higher (by 45.7 TWh) than in the first half of 2024, mainly due to a jump in gas generation by 19% or 35.5 TWh. Lower hydropower (due to drought) and wind generation than last year, and increasing demand marked the period.

Electricity demand continued on an upward trajectory. In the first half of 2025, the EU consumed 1.31 PWh of electricity or 2.2% more than in the same period of last year.