Renewables

Oil company INA to install two solar power plants with total capacity of up to 11 MW

Photo: Location of the Virje solar power plant (study)

Published

May 9, 2019

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

May 9, 2019

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The Croatian energy group INA plans to build two solar power plants with a total installed capacity of about 11 MW, according to applications submitted to the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Energy.

One plant, called Virje, will have a capacity of 7 MW- 8 MW, and will be installed within INA’s central gas facility Molve, in Virje municipality. The other one, called Sisak, with a capacity of 2 MW – 3 MW, will be built in the Sisak refinery.

The Virje solar power plant will cover 147,000 square meters while the Sisak plant will span 33,000, reads the application for the evaluation of the need for environmental impact assessment.

The annual production per kW of installed power is estimated at 1,000 KWh to 1,200 kWh

The environmental protection studies for the two power plants include the possibility of installing photovoltaic panels on the roofs of the administrative buildings of central gas facility Molve and the Sisak refinery.

The Virje and Sisak solar power plants will feed electricity to the distribution network of HEP ODS, while part of the generated electricity will be used for self-consumption at INA facilities.

INA plans to terminate crude oil processing at Sisak refinery

The expected production per kW of installed power is around 1,000 to 1,200 kWh per year, depending on the selected type of photovoltaic module, orientation, and inclination angles, according to the study. This means that the two power plants could generate 11 MWh – 13.2 MWh annually.

At the end of 2018, INA, majority owned by Hungary’s MOL, adopted a business plan for this year which envisages the termination of crude oil processing at the Sisak refinery and its conversion into an industrial activities center. The decision was made due to refinery’s losses, Croatian media reported. In the future, INA will only process crude oil at the Rijeka refinery.

After Ministry receives the application for the evaluation of the need for environmental impact assessment, it must obtain opinions of other institutions and local municipalities, and inform the public. Following this procedure, an approval is issued and the public is again informed about it, according to the ministry’s website.

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

croatia star energy enna geo geothermal projects

British Star Energy sells three geothermal projects in Croatia

30 April 2026 - The transaction releases EUR 5.2 million of restricted cash and removes future capital commitments arising from licences, the company said

Energy transition as systemic transformation Siemens Energy Lazar Mijic interview

Energy transition as systemic transformation

30 April 2026 - We spoke with Lazar Mijić, Head of Global Business Strategy in the business area Transformation of Industries at Siemens Energy, about where the region currently stands on the map of global energy transition

Greek government sees PV losses from zero prices as informal support for consumers

Greece frames solar power’s zero prices as informal consumer support

30 April 2026 - The Greek government is reluctant to remunerate photovoltaic producers for their high losses from zero or negative hourly wholesale prices

croatia grid connection fee hera decision

Croatia finally sets grid connection fee

29 April 2026 - The Croatian Energy Regulatory Agency (HERA) has adopted the fee for the connection to the electricity network