Electricity

Serbian section of Trans-Balkan Electricity Corridor put into operation

Serbian section of Trans-Balkan Electricity Corridor put into operation

Photo: Pixabay

Published

December 22, 2017

Country

,

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

December 22, 2017

Country:

,

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The Power system operator Elektromreža Srbije (EMS) put into operation the 68 km long Serbian section of a 400 Kv transmission line to Romania, as part of the Trans-Balkan Electricity Corridor project.

The EUR 27-million power transmission line is the first completed section of the Corridor. It connects Pančevo, northeast from Belgrade, and Resita in western Romania. The role of the interconnection between two countries is of strengthening national electricity systems as well as the South-East European one.

The Serbian company used its own financing for the construction of the transmission line and managed to complete the project three months ahead of schedule, the government said in the statement.

Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabić emphasized that this is the most modern “energy highway” and that Serbian energy is on its feet and is developing its energy infrastructure.

Minister of Energy Aleksandar Antić said that this is a capital project that will bring long-term benefits to Serbia, increase security of supply and further reduce losses, reads the government statement.

“A pan-European power corridor will pass through our country, which will allow the electricity to travel from the east to the west. It has a capital impact on our overall transmission opportunities and reduces network losses, which are otherwise the smallest in Europe,” Antić said.

Opening of the Serbian section of the Trans-Balkan Electricity Corridor
Photo1. Opening of the Serbian section of the Trans-Balkan Electricity Corridor. December 21, 2017. Credit – Government of the Republic of Serbia

Trans-Balkan Electricity Corridor route

Once completed, the entire Trans-Balkan Electricity Corridor will connect Romania, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Italy. The pipe line will go from Resica in Romania to Pančevo, Obrenovac and Bajina Bašta in Serbia, then to Pljevlja in Montenegro and Lastva, and then under the sea to Vilanova in Italy.

The double 400 kV line has 203 towers on the 68 kilometre route in Serbia across the municipalities of Pančevo, Kovin, Alibunar, Vršac and Bela Crkva.

One subsection in Serbia will go to Kragujevac i Kraljevo, south from Belgrade. That project will start in 2018 and will last two years. Once finished, it will allow for further construction towards Bajina Bašta, Višegrad and Pljevlja. It is expected to be finished in 2024.

Construction of the Serbian section of the overhead power line towards Reșița in Romania started at Pančevo substation northeast of capital Belgrade, in early 2016.

The contractors, Energoprojekt holding and Energoprojekt oprema, said back then that the interconnection would significantly increase the capacity of cross-border transmission, reduce losses and add to safety and reliability of the electric power systems of both countries.

Romania’s national electricity transmission company, Transelectrica announced at the end of October this year, that it completed the crossing of the border to Serbia with the 400 kV Resita (Romania) – Pancevo (Serbia) transmission line.

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

energy storage battery europe

Europe’s energy storage capacity to reach 100 GW this year, more than double by 2030

21 November 2025 - Pumped hydropower has the largest share of existing energy storage, 50.6 GW, followed by batteries, with 44.8 GW

3rd Conference on Advancing Renewable Investments guarantees of origin could drive Europe green energy integration

3rd Conference on Advancing Renewable Investments – guarantees of origin could drive Europe’s green energy integration

21 November 2025 - As CBAM nears implementation, the Ljubljana conference highlighted the tools to accelerate integration with the EU, the Energy Community Secretariat said

montenegro admir sahmanovic energetika teska godina pljevlja potrosnja struje

Šahmanović: Montenegro is facing its most challenging year for energy sector

20 November 2025 - Priorities are price stability, increasing the use of renewables, and strengthening the country's position as an energy hub, Šahmanović said

Alcazar take over NIAT wind farm 500 MW in Egypt Siemens Gamesa after completion

Alcazar to take over NIAT wind farm of 500 MW in Egypt from Siemens Gamesa after completion

20 November 2025 - Alcazar formalized the partnership for the final development, construction and operation of Siemens Gamesa's NIAT wind project in Egypt