Renewables

Emergy acquires Siemens Gamesa’s wind energy portfolio in Romania

Emergy Siemens Gamesa wind Romania

Photo: Emergy

Published

January 10, 2022

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

January 10, 2022

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Norway-based Emergy took over four Romanian subsidiaries of Siemens Gamesa that are developing wind park projects with a combined capacity of almost 370 MW in Dobruja.

Dormant plans for the construction of three wind power plants in Constanța county in Romania’s southeast may be revived after Siemens Gamesa sold its four subsidiaries in the country to Emergy, headquartered in Oslo.

Citing official documents, Profit.ro reported Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy Wind Farms already changed its name to Emergy Stribog and that GER Băneasa became Emergy Stribog Băneasa while GER Independența is now Emergy Stribog Independența and GER Bărăganu became Emergy Stribog Mereni.

The wind farm projects were launched almost a decade ago, but they were put on hold after in 2013 the government in Bucharest slashed incentives based on green certificates for renewable energy. Emergy said the construction works are planned to begin next year and that the facilities would be finished in 2025.

The projects are located in Dobruja, Romania’s wind power hub at the Black Sea

Constanța is in the region of Dobruja, or Dobrogea in Romanian, home to Europe’s largest wind power plant – Fântânele-Cogealac, which Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets (MIRA) bought from ČEZ. Several companies are developing wind farms in the area, located next to the Black Sea.

The three wind farms acquired by Emergy have a total planned capacity of 368.6 MW. The project in Mereni municipality should have 232.2 MW, compared to 111.6 MW for the one in Independența and 24.8 MW for the facility that is intended to be built in Băneasa.

Emergy has other wind farms under development in Ukraine, Serbia and Greece

The nation’s transmission system operator Transelectrica recently won European funding for a new power line in Dobruja. It said the project would enable the integration of 685 MW in renewable sources there and that it aims to complete it by 2025.

Emergy, formerly NBT, is building the first part of its 792 MW wind park Zophia in Ukraine. It already operates the Syvash wind farm in the country. The system has a capacity of just under 250 MW.

Together with WV International, it has 800 MW in wind power plants under development in Serbia as WV International Emergy, alongside an 80 MW solar park. Emergy is also working on three wind projects in Greece totaling nearly 200 MW.

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

Vestas to supply wind turbines for Strazhitsa project in Bulgaria

Vestas to supply wind turbines for Strazhitsa project in Bulgaria

15 April 2026 - Vestas has received an order to supply eleven EnVentus V162-6.4 MW wind turbines for the Strazhitsa project in Bulgaria

Ameresco Sunel Energy wins 83 MW solar project in northern Greece

Ameresco Sunel Energy wins 83 MW solar project in northern Greece

14 April 2026 - Ameresco and its JV partner Sunel were selected for the installation of an 83 MW solar system in Greece's coal land

epbih world bank solar prosumers thermal power plants

EPBiH plans solar projects at two coal power plants, 15 MW of rooftop PV for prosumers

14 April 2026 - EPBiH, with support from the World Bank, plans to modernize the Salakovac hydropower plant, help install 15 MW of rooftop PV for prosumers, and build solar plants with batteries

North Macedonia Integrated National Energy and Climate Plan 2025 2030 NECP

North Macedonia adopts Integrated National Energy and Climate Plan 2025-2030

14 April 2026 - North Macedonia's new NECP, covering the period from 2025 to 2030, brings 61 measures for a strong renewables growth and European standards