Electricity

CEZ agrees to sell Bulgarian assets to Eurohold for EUR 335 million

Photo: Pixabay

Published

June 21, 2019

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

June 21, 2019

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Czech energy company CEZ Group has signed a contract today with holding company Eurohold Bulgaria for the sale of its assets in Bulgaria. Eurohold will pay EUR 335 million for CEZ’s Bulgarian assets, according to press releases from the two companies.

The contract on the sale of CEZ’s assets in Bulgaria to Eurohold is subject to regulatory approvals of the Bulgarian Commission for the Protection of Competition (KZK) and the Bulgarian Energy and Water Regulatory Commission (KEVR).

CEZ’s previous attempt to sell its Bulgarian assets to Inercom Bulgaria did not receive regulatory approval.

The international arbitration launched by CEZ against the Republic of Bulgaria in July 2016 is not affected by the sale and will be continued, the company said.

Eurohold plans to finance the acquisition and refinance the existing CEZ Bulgaria’s debt, as the case may be, partially through own funds and additional funding will be provided by leading international banks, Eurohold said.

In Bulgaria, the CEZ group distributes and sells electricity in the western part of the country and generates electricity, mostly in a coal-fired power plant, according to its website.

Smokestacks of CEZ’s TPP Varna (Photo: Isinov [CC BY 2.5 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5)] cropped)

CEZ’s assets in Bulgaria, subject to the sale, comprise power utility CEZ Distribution Bulgaria, power supplier CEZ Electro Bulgaria, licensed electricity trader CEZ Trade Bulgaria, IT services company CEZ ICT Bulgaria, solar park Free Energy Project Oreshetz, biomass-fired power plant Bara Group and CEZ Bulgaria.

CEZ may also pull out of Romania, Turkey, Poland

CEZ may also pull out of other markets in Eastern Europe, including Romania, Turkey, and Poland, CEO Daniel Benes has been quoted as saying in an interview with Hospodarske Noviny.

In Romania, the Czech company is involved in the generation of electricity from renewable energy sources, as well as in electricity distribution and sales.

CEZ’s assets in Romania include a 600 MW wind farm developed in a EUR 1.1 billion investment. The Fantanele-Cogealac wind farm in the region of Dobruja (Dobrogea) has 240 GE 2.5 MW turbines and produces 1.2 million kWh of electricity annually, according to CEZ Romania’s website.

Among other assets in Romania, CEZ also owns TMK Hydroenergy Power, which operates four hydropower plants (Grebla, Crainicel 1, Crainicel 2, and Breazova) with an installed capacity of around 22 MW.

In Turkey, the CEZ group and its local partner operate a distribution and sales company and generate electricity in gas-fired and hydropower plants, as well as a wind farm.

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

slovenia smart grids investments distribution grid

Slovenia’s EUR 150 million smart grid leap

18 June 2025 - The five electricity distribution firms in Slovenia will invest more than EUR 150 million by the end of March 2026

Spain voltage control insufficient April blackout

Spain’s voltage control was insufficient at time of April blackout

18 June 2025 - The total blackout in the Iberian Peninsula on April 28 was caused by overvoltage, with several factors contributing to the crash

Just Transition Young Voices Award Empowering youth champions in the clean energy transition

Just Transition Young Voices Award: Empowering youth champions in the clean energy transition

18 June 2025 - Young people from the Western Balkans, Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova can apply for the Just Transition Young Voices Award until 28 July 2025

eu nuclear energy plans investments 2050 pinc

EU nuclear ambitions: EUR 241 billion in investment needed by 2050

17 June 2025 - The European Commission has estimated investments needed for the member states' nuclear energy plans at EUR 241 billion until 2050