Electricity

Reconstruction of power cable networks and expansion of smart metering in Republika Srpska

Photo: Elektro Krajina

Published

September 1, 2017

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

September 1, 2017

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Two local power companies in Bosnia-Herzegovina have invited offers for protected cables, substations and smartmeters. The power companies Elektro Bijeljina and ZP Elektrokrajina a.d. Banja Luka, both in the Republika Srpska (RS) will receive loans from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development to finance their projects.

Both of the loans will be used to finance the reconstruction of medium-voltage and low-voltage power cable networks and substations and to expand smart metering in the areas covered by Elektro Bijeljina and Elektrokrajina Banja Luka.

Elektro Bijeljina and Elektrokrajina Banja Luka will receive loans of EUR 15 million for the reconstruction work and efforts to expand the smart metering network in the municipalities they cover in the east and in the northwest of the Republika Srpska.

The loan to the Elektro Bijeljina power company will come in part directly from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and partly from a special fund established and administrated by the EBRD with the contribution of the Taiwanese International Cooperation and Development Fund (TaiwanICDF) in support of investments in efficient energy technologies. The exact amount of that second part of the loan will depend on the level of reduction of carbon emissions but is limited to 50 percent of the total loan.

The loan to Elektrokrajina Banja Luka will come directly and in full from the EBRD.

Both the Elektro Bijeljina and Elektrokrajina Banja Luka local power companies launched the projects in an effort to reduce losses, improve the quality of their supply and secure easier access to the national grid for small hydro and other renewable source power plants.

Elektrokrajina Banja Luka is planning to reduce its overall losses from more than 15 percent currently to between 10 and 12 percent, which would bring it in line with the limits set by the Republika Srpska Regulatory Commission for Energy.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Number prosumers Romania spikes 79 in one year 204 000

Number of prosumers in Romania spikes 79% in one year to 204,000

02 April 2025 - Prosumers in Romania operated 2.44 GW of capacity at the end of January or 63% more than one year before, according to ANRE

Greek companies expand Bulgaria solar power investments

Greek companies expand to Bulgaria with solar power investments

02 April 2025 - PPC and Masdar's Greek subsidiary Terna Energy are separately building two solar power plants in Bulgaria, valued at EUR 190 million in total

montenegro cges profit 2024 aleksandar mijuskovic

Montenegro’s TSO CGES achieves EUR 25 million profit in 2024

02 April 2025 - Implementation of crucial infrastructure projects, investments in new technologies, and improvement of work processes were the decisive factors for the success

Power exchanges test cross border day ahead trading 15 minute intervals

Power exchanges to test cross-border day-ahead trading in 15-minute intervals

02 April 2025 - NEMOs in Europe are starting joint member testing on April 7 for cutting the cross-zonal day-ahead power trading interval to 15 minutes