Why stability in one market no longer guarantees system stability
For much of Europe’s modern energy history, stability was assessed locally. If electricity prices were calm, the power system was […]
For much of Europe’s modern energy history, stability was assessed locally. If electricity prices were calm, the power system was […]
Energy markets are often described as short-memory systems. Prices spike, conditions normalise, and attention moves on. This perception is increasingly
Volatility used to be treated as a market-specific phenomenon. Electricity was volatile because demand had to be balanced in real
In an integrated energy system, shocks no longer respect sectoral boundaries. What begins as a local disruption, a technical failure,
For decades, Europe’s energy debate was organised around sectors. Electricity policy was discussed in terms of generation mix and grid
For most of the past three decades, Europe treated electricity, natural gas, and oil as adjacent but fundamentally separate markets.
Shareholders of Croatia’s oil pipeline operator JANAF are set to vote on a proposal that would see the company enter
A large battery energy storage project in southeastern Bulgaria has reached an important financial milestone after renewables developer Enery secured
The Government of the Republic of Srpska (RS) has committed to reopening the path for Kermas Energija to develop the
The European Union is preparing a comprehensive reform of its carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) aimed at preventing companies from
Energy markets are often analysed as abstractions: prices, curves, spreads, marginal costs. Infrastructure appears in these models as a constraint,
South-East Europe does not sit on the periphery of Europe’s energy system. It sits at its edge in a different