Renewables

Croatia awards five geothermal exploration licenses

croatia geothermal energy exploration license

Photo: Siegfried Poepperl from Pixabay

Published

October 4, 2023

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

October 4, 2023

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The Croatian Ministry of Economy and Sustainable Development has awarded five licenses for the exploration of geothermal waters to firms from Croatia, the United Kingdom, and Turkey.

The geothermal potential of exploration areas was identified earlier in wells created for oil and gas exploration and production, which now reduces the risk and costs for the investors, according to the Ministry of Economy and Sustainable Development.

Of note, the Croatian Hydrocarbon Agency was in charge of the tender.

The temperature at all locations enables the production of electricity, while the total potential of all areas is around 600,000 MWh.

Croatia’s national oil and gas company INA has received licenses for the areas Leščan and Međimurje 5. IGeoPen, owned by A14 Energy Limited, has been awarded a license for the areas Pčelić and Sječe, while Viola Energy Generation, established by Turkey’s Soyak, has obtained a license for the Kotoriba area.

The tender attracted a total of 16 bids

Of note, Soyak and A14 Energy Limited are also developing other projects in Croatia. A14 Energy Limited was recently acquired by the UK-based Star Energy Group.

There were 16 bids from 11 companies based in Croatia, France, Italy, Sweden, Turkey, and the UK, while no bid had been submitted for the Ferdinandovac exploration area.

Minister Filipović: Unlocking the geothermal potential will bring multiple benefits for Croatia’s economy

The firms will drill 21 geothermal wells, and the value of the planned investments is EUR 191.7 million. The total value of investments if the drilling results are good could reach EUR 400 million, the ministry said.

“Using the geothermal potential is a significant step towards increasing energy production in Croatia. It will improve the security of our country by increasing domestic energy production from renewables, but also deliver benefits for the economy,” said Minister Davor Filipović.

According to the analyses, Croatia has enough geothermal potential for the construction of geothermal power plants with a total capacity of around 1 GW.

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

serbia decarbonization goals cost investments eps milan lakovic

Serbia needs EUR 27 billion to reach decarbonization goals

17 April 2026 - Serbia needs EUR 27 billion to reach its decarbonization goals, according to Milan Laković, Executive Director for Finance at power utility EPS

Wilhelmshavn roman bernard battery system BESS NGEN Uniper Germany

NGEN, Uniper break ground on 100 MWh battery system in Germany

17 April 2026 - The battery system in Wilhelmshaven will balance wind and solar power, supporting grid stability and renewables integration

koncar substation sweden contract

Končar lands new record substation deal

16 April 2026 - Croatian engineering firm Končar has signed a EUR 24 million contract to build a substation...

Parliamentarians Energy Community energy security with MEPs Brussels

Parliamentarians from Energy Community discuss energy security with MEPs in Brussels

16 April 2026 - In focus at the Energy Community Parliamentary Plenum in Brussels was the mutual need to integrate energy markets to protect against price and security of supply shocks