Environment

Montenegro stops licensing new small hydropower plants

montenegro small hydropower plants ban

Photo: Flickr/Government og Montenegro

Published

January 18, 2021

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

January 18, 2021

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The Government of Montenegro has decided to suspend the procedure of approving the construction of new small hydropower plants (SHPPs) until the contracts concluded so far are reviewed.

The new Montenegrin government announced in early December that it would ban new small hydropower plants and review all existing concession agreements. Only a month earlier, the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina decided to abolish subsidies for small hydropower plants. These decisions in BiH and Montenegro are a result of the growing public discontent over the damage small hydropower plants cause to the environment.

At its latest session, the Montenegrin government adopted a document on the implementation of projects in the sector of renewable energy sources, which was prepared by the Ministry of Ecology, Spatial Planning and Urbanism.

The construction of SHPP Slatina, which is being built by Milo Đukanović’s son, has also been stopped

The government has agreed to stop approving the construction of small hydropower plant Slatina on the Slatinariver in the municipality of Kolašin, as well as new small hydropower plants, until the revision of the procedure and the legality of concession agreements for small hydropower plants is finished, the document reads.

The new government has already terminated seven concession agreements for the construction of small hydropower plants

Local media reported that the Slatina hydropower plant is being built by a company called BB Hidro, which is co-owned by BlažoĐukanović, son of Milo Đukanović, the President of Montenegro.

According to the document, on December 17, 2020, the government instructed the Ministry of Capital Investments to establish a working group tasked with reviewing the status of concluded concession agreements for small hydropower plants. On December 29, 2020 the government terminated concession agreements for the construction of seven such plants.

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

north macedonia skopje energy efficiency public buildings

North Macedonia plans energy renovation of 14 major public buildings

28 November 2025 - The authorities have prepared a plan for the reconstruction of buildings used by the state administration for the period 2025–2028

croatia zagreb zagrebacki holding loan IFC waste

Zagreb to invest EUR 56 million in waste management, low-emission machinery

28 November 2025 - Zagreb Holding (ZGH), the umbrella firm for the city's utility companies, has requested approval from the authorities for long-term borrowing

world iea report auto industry electric cars

IEA on deep shifts in auto industry: Electric car sales soar, ICE models drop 30%

19 November 2025 - Electric car sales continue to rise and the geography of global sales is shifting, according to the report What Next for the Global Car Industry?

air pollution kakanj

Coal plant Kakanj in BiH halts electricity production amid record air pollution

18 November 2025 - Due to record air pollution, the Municipality of Kakanj requested that the power plant's activity be reduced to supplying thermal energy for district heating