Electricity

Electricity market makes progress with imbalances

Published

June 3, 2016

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

June 3, 2016

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Energy companies registered improvements in the regulated and liberalized power market, with part of imbalances out of the way, Publics.bg reported. Still, there are obstacles remaining from the past, according to participants at a round table on regulated prices and energy availability.

National Electricity Company (NEK), controlled by the government, is the only buyer in Bulgaria. The utility is buying 50% more electricity at regulated prices than it could sell on the regulated market, while having its price per megawatt hour decreased, chief executive Peter Iliev said. He stressed energy surpluses have not been distributed in time, creating excess bulk of up to 800 MWh in one hour. NEK is suggesting for its hydropower plants to be taken out of the regulated market mix, along with industrial thermal power plants. Dimitar Angelov, head of Bulgaria’s Kozloduy nuclear power plant, explained it became harder to compensate for low regulated prices.

Distribution companies also evoked cross-subsidising issues, the article said. EVN Bulgaria repeated its suggestion to split the price at which NEK sells electricity to distribution utilities in two parts – one for households and another for businesses.

Related Articles

Bankwatch Western Balkans abandon waste to energy incineration

Bankwatch: Western Balkans must abandon waste-to-energy incineration

22 April 2026 - Plans for waste incinerators and co-incineration in the Western Balkans pose high financial and health risks, CEE Bankwatch Network warns

serbia bef eu region belgrade energy forum 2026

BEF 2026 agenda is set – 50 speakers on future of energy in Southeast Europe

22 April 2026 - The agenda for the Belgrade Energy Forum - BEF 2026, scheduled for May 11 and 12, is ready. It is organized by Balkan Green Energy News

slovenia electricity natural gas price approval ban

Slovenia imposes mandatory state approval for electricity, natural gas prices

21 April 2026 - The Government of Slovenia has passed a decree requiring suppliers of electricity and natural gas to obtain approval for price increases

Hidroelectrica spearheading next wave BESS Romania Simtel Guris Econergy

Hidroelectrica spearheading next wave of BESS investments in Romania

21 April 2026 - Electricity producers in Romania are investing in several gigawatts of battery storage – for hybrid power plants or standalone systems