South-East Europe’s next decade: Can the region finally move from vulnerability to real energy strength?
South-East Europe has spent most of the past three decades reacting to energy problems rather than shaping its own future. […]
South-East Europe has spent most of the past three decades reacting to energy problems rather than shaping its own future. […]
Energy sectors rarely collapse suddenly. They decay gradually. Systems do not break overnight; they weaken, absorb shocks, survive another season,
For years, energy debates in South-East Europe were dominated by national narratives. Every country spoke about its sovereignty, its own
In public debate, “energy transition” is often presented as inevitability wrapped in optimism: cleaner power, modern technologies, new industry opportunities,
In South-East Europe, energy policy has never truly been about kilowatt-hours, barrels or cubic meters alone. It has always been
Natural gas in Serbia is not simply a fuel. It is urban stability in winter, an invisible lifeline for industry,
Natural gas is the most silent yet economically decisive energy infrastructure that Serbia operates. It is not debated with the
For nearly two decades, Serbia carried a self-image that shaped politics, strategy and public psychology: the idea that it was
Integration does not always arrive with declarations, treaties or ceremonial signatures. Sometimes it arrives silently, through price synchronization, liquidity convergence,
Serbia’s electricity sector in 2025 is no longer an engineering monopoly environment where outcomes are predetermined by state planning and
For investors studying Serbia’s power market in 2025, numbers alone never tell the full story. Installed capacity figures, annual production
Serbia’s electricity sector in 2025 is no longer a simple utility story. It has become a trading story, a margin