Electricity

North Macedonia to convert oil-fired power plant Negotino to natural gas

Photo: TPP Negotino (Ministry of Environment and Physical Planning)

Published

September 9, 2020

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

September 9, 2020

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The new Government of North Macedonia intends to switch the 210 MW thermal power plant TEC Negotino from fuel oil to natural gas.

The oil-fired facility is on cold reserve for the country’s power system. Negotino, a state-owned power plant, is paid to be prepared to start generation very fast if there is a need.

For years now there are plans to convert it to natural gas, to shut it down or to construct a new power plant. Burning fuel oil causes significant pollution.

The goverment vowed to launch a tendering process in the next six months

The cabinet of Prime Minister Zoran Zaev promised to start the tendering process for an overhaul as part of the plan for the next four years.

The public call for the modernization and transformation of TPP Negotino will be announced within six months after the government took power, the document reads.

The price of electricity produced in Negotino is around 130 EUR/MWh

The plant will use natural gas and provide opportunities for increased agricultural production.

The plan doesn’t elaborate further. Former cabinets have intended to make Negotino a supplier of cheap electricity for agricultural companies in the area in order to contribute to their competitiveness and export of early vegetables.

Negotino was built in 1978. According to the local media, the price of electricity produced in Negotino is very high, around 130 EUR/MWh.

What is written in energy strategy

According to the country’s Energy Development Strategy until 2040, Negotino is planned to be shut down, but there is also an idea to convert it to natural gas.

The goverment also plans to modernise TPP Bitola

Two of the strategy’s scenarios entail a coal exit by 2025, with the third delaying the closure of coal-fired power plant REK Bitola until 2040.

However, the government’s plan is to modernise the 700 MW thermal power system in order to lower emissions of dust, nitrogen and sulfur oxides. The reconstruction will include providing conditions for the first unit in REK Bitola to use different types of fuel.

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 batteries BESS hgk position paper issues necp aljosa pleic

HGK: Croatia has only 11 MW of battery power, regulations stall investments

10 March 2026 - The Croatian Chamber of Economy (HGK) has published a position paper on barriers to battery investments in the country

epcg battery energy storage tender

No bids in Montenegro’s second tender for battery energy storage

10 March 2026 - The tender was for only 200 kWh to 260 kWh of battery storage, whereas the previous, cancelled bidding envisaged 240 MWh

montenegro cges s2p electric grid connection solar tupan prentic asanovic

Swiss S2P Electric signs grid connection deal for solar project in Montenegro

10 March 2026 - The contract represents the eighth such deal for grid connection for renewable energy power plants signed by Montenegro’s TSO CGES

bozinovska interconnections electricity see oecd

Božinovska: Interconnections crucial for Western Balkans energy security

09 March 2026 - North Macedonia is actively working on several key projects for interconnections with electricity systems in the region, said Sanja Božinovska