Energy Crisis

Bulgaria to deliver 200 MWh of electricity to North Macedonia

Bulgaria North Macedonia electricity import export kovachevski

Photo: Government of North Macedonia

Published

September 6, 2022

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

September 6, 2022

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Bulgaria will deliver 200 megawatt-hours (MWh) of electricity to North Macedonia to help the country mitigate the effects of the energy crisis, local media reported. The deal was agreed in Sophia at the meeting between prime ministers Dimitar Kovachevski and Galab Donev.

Deliveries of electricity from the beginning of October to the end of March would ensure a stable supply to firms in North Macedonia, which is one of the key demands of the business sector in the country, according to the media reports.

Kovachevski said the purpose of the meeting was to try to find a solution for the supply of electricity during the fourth quarter of this year and the first quarter of 2023 under optimal conditions for businesses.

The two leaders agreed to immediately establish a working group consisting of the minister of economy of North Macedonia, the minister of energy of Bulgaria, representatives of power utility Elektrani na Severna Makedonija (ESM) and energy companies from Bulgaria. It will discuss the technical parameters in terms of capacities and electricity transport, he said at the press conference after the meeting.

The working group will prepare the proposal on the cooperation within two weeks

Kovachevski added prices would have to be defined in accordance with the legislation of Bulgaria and North Macedonia and the European Union’s directives.

Kovachevski separately stressed the government would do everything to determine an electricity price optimal for domestic firms under the current conditions, lower than at power exchanges and sustainable for economic entities. The price will be discussed by the working group, he added.

Bulgaria is North Macedonia’s first choice for securing electricity imports

Earlier, firms asked the government to make sure cross-border flows of electricity are not interrupted, warning that so far it has occurred three times between Bulgaria and North Macedonia.

According to Kovachevski, the issue was also the subject of talks with the Bulgarian side.

The proposal on all plans for cooperation is expected over the next two weeks, he added.

Kovachevski said North Macedonia has other options, but that Bulgaria is one of the major providers of baseload electricity in the region with its nuclear power plant Kozloduy.

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

Greek Aktor BESS subsidiary entering LNG trade

Greek company Aktor sets up BESS subsidiary after entering LNG trade

23 December 2025 - Power storage services are the core activity of Aktor's new subsidiary Aktor BESS, but it could also generate electricity

OMV Petrom CE Oltenia building solar parks of 550 MW in total

OMV Petrom, CE Oltenia building solar parks of 550 MW in total

23 December 2025 - Romanian state-owned CE Oltenia is turning its coal land into PV plants in partnership with OMV Petrom. The four projects total 550 MW.

Leitwind drives energy independence across Balkans

23 December 2025 - Leitwind makes wind turbines from 250 kW to 3 MW, engineered to perform efficiently under the full range of wind conditions in Southeastern Europe

TotalEnergies sells half of 424 MW portfolio in Greece

TotalEnergies sells half of 424 MW portfolio in Greece

23 December 2025 - TotalEnergies agreed to divest of 50% of its 424 MW wind and solar portfolio in Greece, as part of a global savings strategy