Renewables

Solar PV takes top share of Slovenia’s RES/CHP support payments in H1

Solar PV Slovenia support payments deficit

Photo: Chris Chesneau from Pixabay

Published

August 15, 2019

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

August 15, 2019

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Slovenia’s support payments for electricity produced from renewable energy sources and high-efficiency cogeneration (combined heat and power – CHP) stood at around EUR 65.6 million, not including VAT, in the first half of 2019, down 6% year-on-year.

According to data from power market operator Borzen, the total electricity production within Slovenia’s support system for RES/CHP increased by 4% in H1 2019 compared to H1 2018, to 508.2 million kWh.

A total of 36 power plants entered the system in the period from January to June 2019, including new entrants and power plants that had a change in ownership or support type (classic feed-in vs. operational support, i.e. feed-in premium).

On June 30, 2019, the feed-in system included 3,864 power plants with a combined installed capacity of 414 MWe.

The average support payment stood at EUR 0.12902 per kWh in January-June, down from EUR 0.14188 in the same period a year earlier.

Solar PV takes largest share of support payments

Solar photovoltaic (PV) power plants took the largest share of support payments, EUR 31.9 million or 48.6%, while producing the second-biggest share of electricity covered by the support system, 133.8 million kWh or 26.3%.

Fossil fuel-fired CHP led in terms of electricity generation, with 198.8 million kWh or 39.1%, taking the second-largest support share, of EUR 16.3 million or 24.8%.

Wood biomass facilities came in 3rd both in terms of output and support shares, of 71.2 million kWh or 14% and EUR 9.34 million or 14.2%, respectively.

Hydropower plants (HPPs) generated the fourth-biggest share of electricity, 55.2 million kWh or 10.9%, while getting the fifth-largest support share, EUR 2.35 million or 3.58%.

In fifth place by output were biogas facilities, with 43.4 million kWh or 8.53%, taking the fourth-biggest support share, of EUR 4.96 million or 7.56%.

Wind power plants followed suit with 3.12 million kWh or 0.61% and support payments of EUR 137,808 or 0.21%.

Other plant types accounted for 2.55 million kWh of the electricity produced and EUR 626,802 or 0.96% of support payments.

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 india ChemVolt Global ElevenEs

Indian ChemVolt Global, Serbian ElevenEs forge strategic partnership for batteries

08 October 2025 - India-based ChemVolt Global and ElevenEs, headquartered in Serbia, established a strategic partnership

turkey teias world bank loan Humberto Lopez Orhan Kaldirim Alparslan Bayraktar

Turkey’s TEİAŞ signs USD 750 million loan contract with World Bank

08 October 2025 - A USD 750 million loan will be used for the Transforming Power Transmission System Project, Turkey’s transmission system operator TEİAŞ said

Montenegrin TSO CGES buying power transmission lines Serbian counterpart EMS

Montenegrin TSO CGES buying power transmission lines from its Serbian counterpart EMS

08 October 2025 - Serbian TSO EMS agreed with CGES agreed that each would become the owner of the parts of overhead transmission lines on its country's territory

Romania Hidroelectrica hydropower battery storage

Romania’s Hidroelectrica to equip hydropower plants with battery storage

08 October 2025 - Romanian state-owned power utility Hidroelectrica plans to integrate battery storage with all its run-of-river hydropower plants