Renewables

Inercom Bulgaria divests solar projects in fresh bid to buy CEZ assets

Photo: Pixabay

Published

October 18, 2018

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

October 18, 2018

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Inercom Bulgaria EAD has filed a fresh merger notification to the country’s Commission for the Protection of Competition concerning its deal to buy Czech energy group CEZ’s assets in Bulgaria, having restructured and divested its solar photovoltaic power projects, local media reported, citing a statement from Inercom Bulgaria EAD.

Inercom Bulgaria EAD said that the restructuring was in response to the competition watchdog’s earlier decision to block the deal over concerns about the proposed concentration.

On July 19, the regulator blocked Inercom’s proposal to buy CEZ’s assets in Bulgaria, saying that the deal might hamper competition on the market, Focus News Agency recalled. The six photovoltaic power stations owned by the Inercom group emerged as an obstacle to the deal, with the watchdog saying that the merger would give Inercom significant advantage over other photovoltaic power producers on the market.

Inercom Bulgaria EAD is a special purpose vehicle, incorporated for the purpose of the transaction with CEZ, according to its website. It is part of a group of companies, with the main part of the group’s activity being related to the production of electricity, design, construction, and operational management of power plants generating electricity from renewable energy sources, an earlier press release on the website reads.

The projects that are reportedly no longer part of Inercom’s portfolio included 6 active photovoltaic power stations with a capacity of 23 MW.

According to earlier reports, CEZ agreed in February to sell its Bulgarian assets to Inercom for an estimated EUR 320 million. The news raised concerns as the little-known Inercom was a much smaller company than CEZ Bulgaria, but also over media reports concerning alleged connections between Energy Minister Temenuzhka Petkova and Inercom’s owners.

This led to Temenuzhka’s resignation, which was accepted by Prime Minister Boyko Borisov, but then the Bulgarian government decided not to accept it.

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

Serbia’s Đedović Handanović in Azerbaijan for discussions on gas projects

08 April 2026 - Serbian Minister Dubravka Đedović Handanović met in Baku with Azerbaijani ministers and the head of SOCAR

croatia rimac technology new bmw i7 sedan battery

BMW, Rimac to unveil fully electric i7 on April 22

08 April 2026 - The new BMW i7 will be the first BMW Group BEV to feature a jointly developed battery system, manufactured at the Rimac Campus near Zagreb

china solar wind vision iran war

Xi: Pioneering wind, solar energy was visionary move

08 April 2026 - Xi Jinping stressed the importance of developing hydropower and environmental protection, as well as of a safe expansion of nuclear energy

tab battery sodium-ion bess

Slovenian TAB plans to develop its own sodium-ion batteries

08 April 2026 - Slovenian battery manufacturer TAB recently obtained approval for a trial production of sodium-ion cells