Who actually shapes liquidity, cross-border flows and price discovery in SEE’s gas markets
Gas in South-East Europe is not just a commodity. It is infrastructure, geopolitics, finance, and strategic vulnerability wrapped together. Unlike […]
Gas in South-East Europe is not just a commodity. It is infrastructure, geopolitics, finance, and strategic vulnerability wrapped together. Unlike […]
The question of who truly controls electricity in South-East Europe is not really about megawatts alone. It is about who
Power trading in the Western Balkans has never simply been about electricity. It is about geography, interconnection politics, hydrology, capital,
Europe has already crossed a strategic threshold. Renewables are no longer an experimental transition concept; they are the backbone of
South-East Europe is accelerating into a renewable future, but the systems meant to stabilise, balance and move that electricity across
Infrastructure does not lie. Where political speeches can overpromise and strategies can remain theoretical, infrastructure exposes whether a region truly
Europe’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is often discussed as a technical climate policy, but in truth it is one of
Europe’s seventy-percent cross-zonal electricity rule is not a bureaucratic exercise. It is a structural redefinition of how power markets in
South-East Europe remains a strange contradiction in Europe’s energy map. This is a region that has hydropower heritage, available renewable
Europe’s energy transformation is most visible in electricity markets and gas security strategies. But underneath those headline developments, another strategic
Europe is rewriting its energy future. Electricity markets are being redesigned for precision, flexibility and integration. Gas politics have shifted
For two decades, Europe believed that liberalised gas markets, diversified suppliers and rules-based infrastructure would guarantee stability. That illusion collapsed