SEE’s electricity reality 2025–2026: Caveats, structural risks and the future of industrial competitiveness
Electricity pricing in Southeast Europe has never been a simple technical matter, but in 2025 and 2026 it becomes something […]
Electricity pricing in Southeast Europe has never been a simple technical matter, but in 2025 and 2026 it becomes something […]
Hungary occupies one of the most strategically important and industrially advanced positions in Central and Southeast Europe. Over the past
Montenegro’s industrial electricity environment entering 2025 is shaped by a blend of legacy strength, evolving market dynamics, structural vulnerabilities and
North Macedonia enters 2025 carrying one of the most challenging industrial electricity pricing outlooks in Southeast Europe. Unlike Bulgaria’s capacity
Albania represents one of the most structurally unique electricity markets in Southeast Europe, and that uniqueness defines both opportunity and
Bosnia and Herzegovina occupies one of the most paradoxical positions in Southeast Europe when it comes to industrial electricity pricing.
Bulgaria stands at an interesting and strategically important position in Southeast Europe’s electricity and industrial cost landscape. Unlike many peers
Romania occupies a distinctive position in Southeast Europe’s electricity and industrial landscape. Unlike many of its neighbours, Romania possesses a
Few Southeast European electricity markets capture the complexity of transition, ambition and vulnerability as vividly as Greece. Entering 2025, industrial
In Croatia, industrial electricity pricing has evolved into one of the core determinants of industrial resilience, cost competitiveness, and economic
Industrial electricity pricing has become one of the decisive economic variables shaping Serbia’s industrial strategy, competitiveness positioning, and investment prospects.
Electricity is no longer just a utility input for Southeast Europe’s industry; it has become the decisive competitive variable that