Renewables-driven intraday swings reshape Southeast Europe power trading
The trading structure across Southeast Europe is changing rapidly, with renewable intermittency, intraday volatility and cross-border balancing opportunities playing a […]
The trading structure across Southeast Europe is changing rapidly, with renewable intermittency, intraday volatility and cross-border balancing opportunities playing a […]
Market data for Week 20 across Southeast Europe showed wholesale electricity prices falling sharply in most markets as wind output
The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, originally framed as an industrial decarbonization tool for steel, cement, aluminum and carbon-intensive manufacturing, is
CBAM is set to change how electricity is traded between the EU and the Western Balkans from 2026. From that
Europe’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is beginning to affect South-East Europe’s power market beyond industrial exports. The shift is linked
North Macedonia’s day-ahead electricity exchange recorded 117,727.5 MWh of traded power in April 2026. This was 6.8% higher than the
For decades, South-East Europe’s power strategy centered on generation buildout and the preservation of baseload supply. Lignite, hydropower, nuclear and
April 2026 brought a clear shift in Croatia’s electricity trading dynamics, with CROPEX recording higher activity as prices eased in
South-East Europe’s wholesale market is entering a new operating logic as weather-driven generation replaces the older rhythm of dispatchable baseload.
Electricity trading activity across Southeast Europe in April showed a decisive break from baseload-led pricing patterns, pointing to a structural
April trading across Southeast Europe showed a coordinated shift in electricity system fundamentals, with falling spot prices emerging as the
Serbia’s power trading activity showed a clear monthly lift in April 2026, even as price signals weakened compared with the