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OSSH Launches €4.4 Million Smart Meter Installation Project Across Albania

The Electricity Distribution System Operator (OSSH) plans to begin the installation of smart meters for end consumers.

This Thursday, the operator launched a procurement procedure through the public procurement system titled: “Installation of the Smart Metering System for End Consumers, within the Energy Balance Metering System in MV-LV Electrical Substations, and their integration into the OSSH metering platform,” with a total estimated fund of 432 million lekë, or approximately €4.4 million.

According to the tender documents, the investment will focus on areas with high electricity consumption and higher levels of network losses, with the aim of improving technical efficiency and strengthening control over electricity distribution.

As part of previous projects, OSSH has already installed thousands of smart meters in several regions across the country. In Durrës, during the 2023 investment phase, 1,752 intelligent energy balance metering systems were installed in MV-LV substations, while in 2024 an additional 848 smart meters were installed for end consumers supplied by these substations.

Meanwhile, in Tirana, on feeders F7 and F8 of the Kashar substation, 200 intelligent balance metering systems and 3,157 smart meters were installed for end subscribers.

According to OSSH, the expansion of the project is also linked to the growing number of consumers in these areas, driven by population growth and new urban developments, including construction projects carried out as part of the reconstruction efforts following the 2019 earthquake.

The company states that the investment is part of its strategy to gradually replace the analog metering system with smart technology, in accordance with the electricity law and the directives of the European Energy Community.

The operator emphasizes that maintaining the same communication technology is intended to ensure compatibility with existing investments and maximize the use of the infrastructure developed so far.

The tender foresees the installation of a total of 14,035 smart meters. The largest number will be installed at the Sallmone substation with 7,760 units, followed by Shkoza with 3,560 meters, Spitalla with 1,600, and Kashari with 1,115 smart meters.

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Air under pressure: new report monitoring finds pockets of hazardous air and chronic noise across Tirana

A new annual monitoring report produced by Co-PLAN under the GreenAL project paints a stark picture: parts of Tirana regularly record pollutant concentrations and noise levels that pose real risks to public health. The study, based on an “alternative” (low-cost, widely distributed) monitoring network, identifies clear hotspots tied to traffic, construction and dense urban activity and lays out a rapid expansion plan to scale monitoring across six municipalities.

What the data show

Distribution of CO₂ pollution in the first (left) and second (right) rounds of monitoring.

Distribution of CO₂ pollution in the first (left) and second (right) rounds of monitoring.

  • CO₂ and urban emissions remain problematic. The report notes stations where CO₂ is “above acceptable limits,” especially along major boulevards and compact urban corridors where vehicle combustion and lack of green space concentrate emissions. The authors link persistent high CO₂ to heavy traffic and limited vegetation for removal.

  • Fine and coarse particulates (PM₂.₅ and PM₁₀) exceed health guidelines in many locations. The monitoring finds repeated exceedances at arterial roads such as Rruga e Kavajës and at zones named “Zogu i Zi” and “Kryqëzimi i 21 Dhjetorit” — areas with intense traffic and construction activity. The report compares measured values against national, EU, US and WHO limits (Table 1).

  • Nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) spikes in traffic hotspots. High NO₂ concentrations were recorded near the Kryqëzimi i 21 Dhjetorit and Pazari i Ri intersections — locations directly tied to combustion emissions from vehicles and some industrial sources. The report flags chronic NO₂ exposure as linked to rising asthma and other respiratory illnesses.

  • Noise pollution is widespread and sometimes severe. Acoustic monitoring reveals daytime peaks and persistent high levels in market and major-road areas. Sheshi Italia registered the highest single measurement in round 1 (72.2 dB); Rruga e Kavajës and Shkolla M. Grameno recorded ~70–71 dB. Quieter residential spots such as Zogu i Zi measured ~61 dB. The report stresses that sustained exposure at these levels is linked to stress, sleep disruption and cardiovascular effects.

Context and method

GreenAL’s monitoring uses an “alternative” methodology of many low-cost sensors and mobile/portable stations to map pollution spatially and temporally across the city (the project builds on the Green Lungs initiative and is funded by Sida). The approach produces high-resolution snapshots across dozens to hundreds of points — useful for revealing local hotspots that fixed, sparse regulatory stations can miss. The report explicitly frames these data as complementary to official monitoring and as a basis for targeted interventions.

Notable numbers and comparisons

The report reproduces a comparative table of limit values used for reference: for example, Albania’s annual PM₂.₅ limit is listed as 20 µg/m³, while the EU reference is 10 µg/m³ and the WHO guideline 5 µg/m³ (the report uses these benchmarks when judging exceedances). It also notes earlier monitoring rounds where NO₂ reached roughly EU normative levels and CO₂ was reported as multiple times higher than benchmark values.

Hotspots and likely causes

The spatial maps and station lists in the report consistently point to the same drivers:

  • Traffic corridors (commuter boulevards, intersections) — engines and stop-and-go flow concentrate NO₂ and particulates.

  • Construction and material burning near roads — elevate PM₁₀/PM₂.₅ locally.

  • Dense urban fabric with little greenery — increases CO₂ retention and amplifies urban heat/island effects, which in turn can worsen pollutant chemistry and human exposure.

Stations with the highest PM₂.₅ and PM₁₀ pollution during the monitoring period

Public-health implications

GreenAL frames the findings in public-health terms: repeated exceedances of PM₂.₅/PM₁₀ and elevated NO₂ are associated with acute and chronic respiratory disease, cardiovascular risk and — for noise — sleep disturbance, cognitive impacts on children and increased stress. The most exposed populations are people living and working along the identified corridors, market workers, schoolchildren near busy roads, and residents adjacent to construction sites.

The report’s response plan 

Përmbledhje e shpërndarjes së ndotjes akustike gjatë periudhës së monitorimit

Përmbledhje e shpërndarjes së ndotjes akustike gjatë periudhës së monitorimit

GreenAL commits to scaling monitoring from the current network to ~800 monitoring points distributed across six municipalities (Tiranë 300; Shkodër, Elbasan, Korçë, Durrës and Fier  each 100). The plan emphasizes low-cost sensor deployment, community engagement, and an open Green-Lungs web/GIS platform for publishing data and increasing transparency. These steps should improve spatial coverage and public access to data — but the report also acknowledges that data alone do not reduce emissions without accompanying policy measures.

What the data imply for policy — investigative analysis

  1. Targeted traffic management now, structural change next. The strong concentration of pollution on boulevards and intersections implies that immediate gains could come from congestion-reduction (low-emission zones, targeted traffic calming, improving public transport frequency and reliability) while planning for structural shifts (modal shift to public and active transport).

  2. Construction controls and road dust mitigation. Frequent exceedances near construction sites point to a need for stricter dust control (water suppression, covered loads, restricted working hours) and enforcement of construction permits tied to pollution mitigation.

  3. Protect sensitive sites (schools, markets) quickly. Relocating high-exposure activities, installing protective vegetation buffers, or limiting heavy traffic during school hours can reduce exposure for vulnerable groups.

  4. Pair expanded monitoring with clear regulatory thresholds and action triggers. Low-cost networks are valuable for detection — but they must be tied to predefined response actions (e.g., temporary traffic restrictions, emissions inspections) so data lead to measurable reductions.

  5. Use open data to empower citizens and accountability. The planned Green-Lungs platform can increase transparency; civil society and local media should use these data to press municipal authorities for time-bound measures.

Caveats and further scrutiny

GreenAL’s methodology is explicitly described as “alternative” and complementary; low-cost sensors can have inter-sensor variability and need calibration against reference instruments for regulatory decisions. The report notes meteorology, diurnal variability and episodic activities (e.g., construction) as factors that affect readings  so trend assessments and seasonally robust datasets will be essential before assuming long-term averages. The authors plan deeper methodological analysis in subsequent reports.

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Albania’s Water Infrastructure Investments Surpass €150 Million in 2025

Investments in Albania’s water supply and sewerage sector reached a significant milestone in 2025, exceeding 15.6 billion ALL (approximately €156 million). This surge in funding reflects the government’s intensified efforts to modernize aging infrastructure and meet European Union environmental standards.

According to official data from the Ministry of Infrastructure and Energy, the 2025 budget execution for the Water Supply and Sewerage (WSS) sector underscores a strategic priority to ensure 24-hour water availability and drastically reduce technical and administrative losses.

Strategic Objectives and Financial Allocation

The total investment of 15.6 billion ALL was channeled through several key pillars. The primary focus remains the rehabilitation of distribution networks in major urban centers and the expansion of wastewater treatment capabilitiesa critical requirement for the country’s tourism-driven economy and its EU integration path.

Government officials noted that these investments are part of a broader master plan aimed at making the sector financially self-sufficient. Historically, the Albanian water sector has struggled with high levels of “Non-Revenue Water” (NRW)—water that is produced but “lost” before it reaches the customer through leaks or unauthorized consumption.

Institutional Reform and Aggregation

The 2025 investment peak coincides with the ongoing sector reform, which involves the “aggregation” or merging of municipal water utilities into larger regional entities. This consolidation is designed to improve management efficiency, optimize human resources, and create economies of scale that allow for better maintenance and service delivery.

By centralizing operations, the government aims to reduce the heavy reliance on state subsidies, directing more funds toward capital investments rather than covering the operational deficits of smaller, inefficient utilities.

International Support and Key Projects

A substantial portion of the €150 million investment portfolio is supported by international development partners. High-impact projects are currently being co-financed by:

  • KfW (German Development Bank): Focusing on the modernization of networks in coastal and northern regions.

  • The World Bank: Supporting the National Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Modernization Program.

  • The European Union (IPA Funds): Specifically targeting wastewater treatment plants to protect Albania’s coastline and rivers.

Key projects highlighted in the 2025 report include the ongoing overhaul of the Tirana water network, which seeks to secure a continuous supply for the capital’s growing population, and critical interventions in the Durrës and Vlora regions to support the booming hospitality sector.

Looking Ahead

While the €150 million figure represents a record high, experts suggest that sustained investment will be required over the next decade to fully modernize the national grid. The Ministry of Infrastructure and Energy emphasized that the focus for the remainder of the year will be on monitoring the performance of the newly aggregated regional utilities to ensure that the capital infusion translates into tangible improvements for Albanian citizens and businesses.

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The Dutch win the incinerator concession in Tirana, offered 128M Euros

An Dutch company with offices in Amsterdam, Netherlands, is the winner of the concession for the construction of the incinerator landfill and rehabilitation of landfills in Tirana.

The Ministry of Environment that was also the contracting authority for this concession procedure announced that Integrated Energy B.V offered 128 million euros by announcing the valid offer in this procedure.

On the other hand, it is learned that this company was the only competitor to submit an offer.

The concession procedure was announced shortly before the general elections, while the bids were submitted on June 12, 2017, and during the months the technical and legal documents of the company were analyzed.

Notice to the Concession Winner

For: “Integrated Energy B.V.” company with address Hoogoorddreef 15 1101 BA Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Concession procedure / public private partnership

Short description of the contract: “Landfill Construction, Incinerator and Rehabilitation of Existing Landfills Tirana” Concession and duration of the contract 30 years.

We notify that these bidders have participated in the procedure with the respective values ​​offered:

“Integrated Energy BV” Value 128 248 330 (one hundred and twenty eight million two hundred and forty eight thousand three hundred and thirty) Euro without VAT, or 17 139 106 821 (seventeen billion one hundred and thirty nine million One hundred and six thousand eight hundred and twenty-one) ALL without VAT.

[highlight2]Related older article: Another Incinerator without Public Consultations, Directors from Fraudulent Financial Firm[/highlight2]

[highlight2]Related Article : Is Veliaj Preparing to Build a Waste Incinerator in Tirana? [/highlight2]

The Ministry of Environment announces the “Integrated Energy BV” address Hoogoorddreef 15 1101 BA Amsterdam, The Netherlands that the bid submitted on 12.06.2017 for the concession of “Landfill Construction, Incinerator and Rehabilitation of Existing Landfills Tirana” is accepted.

Even though there is to much shadow in the procedures how this tender is organized and managed by Ministry of Environment, giving extra point favored to this company before biding . We tried to find some contacts of this Dutch company, but till now there is no official contacts, website, email, or any contact details.

Attached the Bonus that the Ministry of Environment gave to Integrated Energy BV (alb):  [pdfjs-viewer url=”https%3A%2F%2Finfo.aea-al.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2017%2F08%2FRelacioni-per-incerneratorin-e-Tiranes.pdf” viewer_width=100% viewer_height=1360px fullscreen=true download=true print=true]