Environment

Montenegrin government fulfills promise: Seven contracts for SHPPs terminated 

Montenegrin government fulfills promise Seven contracts for SHPPs terminated 

Photo: Stephanie BUSANI from Pixabay

Published

February 11, 2021

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

February 11, 2021

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

When it was elected, the Government of Montenegro announced it would ban the construction of small hydropower plants (SHPPs) and revise concessions. Three months later it terminated seven contracts.

The Montenegrin government has terminated seven contracts for the construction of small hydroelectric power plants on the rivers of Đurička in Plav, Bistrica in Bijelo Polje, Bukovica in Šavnik, Reževića in Budva and Ljeviška and Raštak in Kolašin. According to the domestic media, the construction of two SHPPs was planned on Raštak.

The government suspects there was corruption and nepotism, but official explanation for terminating the contracts wasn’t provided

The daily Dan reported contracts were terminated with Hydra MNE, Plava Hydro Power and Bistica Clean Energy. Hydra MNE is majority-owned by Jovan Gordijan and Milovan Maksimović, President Milo Đukanović’s cousin. Plava Hydro Power is apparently linked with Florin Krasniqi, while Žarko Burić’s BP Hydropower has majority control over the Bistrica Clean Energy consortium.

Of note, three weeks ago the government suspended the approval of the construction of SHPP Slatina on the Slatina river in Kolašin. It was under development by BB Hidro, co-owned by Blaž Đukanović, the president’s son.

Prime Minister Zdravko Krivokapić earlier announced a ban on the construction of SHPPs would be introduced and that all concessions will be reassessed

As he presented the proposed cabinet’s program in the Parliament of Montenegro at the beginning of December, just before he became prime minister, Krivokapić promised a ban on the construction of SHPPs and that all concession agreements would be reviewed on suspicion of corruption and nepotism.

The government stopped approving new SHPPs three weeks ago

Three weeks ago, the government stopped licensing new small hydropower plants until the existing contracts are reviewed by the working group of the Ministry of Capital Investments.

However, the termination of the concession agreements will have its consequences, because the investors have already filed claims. The ministry wouldn’t give an estimate on the damages that would need to be paid, while it attributed the develoments to bad planning, Vijesti reported.

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

Three cities reviving protests against Rio Tinto lithium project Jadar in Serbia

Three cities reviving protests against Rio Tinto’s lithium project in Serbia

20 July 2025 - Opponents of Rio Tinto's plan to mine and process a lithium and boron ore called jadarite in western Serbia held a protest in Loznica

bih epbih waste incineration tpp tuzla trial

BiH’s power utility EPBiH cancels waste co-incineration trial in Tuzla coal plant

18 July 2025 - Power utility Elektroprivreda Bosne i Hercegovine aborted a waste co-incineration test at its Tuzla coal power plant

Belgrade in focus challenges and solutions for sustainable urban development Ivan Gazdic cms

Belgrade in focus: challenges and solutions for sustainable urban development

17 July 2025 - The author of the feature is Ivan Gazdić, Attorney at Law and Partner at Petrikić & Partneri AOD in cooperation with CMS Reich-Rohrwig Hainz

Successful completion of the WISE serbia mentorship program trust, support, and personal transformation

WISE Serbia mentorship program successfully completed: trust, support, and personal growth

24 June 2025 - The first mentorship program of the WISE Serbia women’s network in sustainable energy, the green economy, and climate action was successfully concluded with an event held in Belgrade