Electricity

Veolia buys 430 MW gas power plant in Hungary from Uniper

Veolia 430 MW gas power plant Hungary Uniper

Photo: Downtowngal / https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode.en

Published

February 23, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

February 23, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

By buying the Gönyű gas-fired power plant in Hungary, Veolia is strengthening its flexible energy portfolio. The seller, Uniper, is making a step toward its ambitious climate neutrality goal and fulfilling the obligations for a state aid package approved at the height of the energy crisis.

Veolia said it has signed an agreement with Uniper, via its Hungarian subsidiary Veolia Invest Hungary, for the acquisition of a 430 MW power plant. Located in Gönyű, in northwest Hungary, the gas-fired combined cycle facility is the most modern and efficient in the country, according to the announcement. It was commissioned in 2011.

The gas power plant plays a crucial role in regulating and balancing the Hungarian power grid, thanks to cutting-edge technologies that make its production capacities flexible, the French company pointed out. On that note, Veolia also said the takeover would complete its flexible energy portfolio to meet the needs of resilient power systems.

Demand for ancillary services continues to grow, as current flexibility volumes in the European Union’s power system need to be doubled by 2030 to keep pace with the growth of fluctuating renewable electricity supply, the update adds.

Veolia set to obtain regulatory clearance by end-June

Veolia said it now has 2.4 GW in flexible electricity production. The deal is subject to regulatory approvals, which the companies expect to obtain by mid-year. They agreed not to publish the financial details.

“In the context of European energy mix evolution towards more renewables and therefore more intermittent production, demand for ancillary services, and in particular electrical flexibility, continues to grow, with a rising need for power grid balancing. It requires both enhanced electricity interconnection and operators with cutting-edge digital expertise to aggregate the production capacity of several power generation units and provide the grid with flexible energy volumes that can be introduced or withdrawn from the grid as required,” Veolia said.

Uniper targeting carbon neutrality by 2040

The transaction concerns 100% of the shares in Uniper Hungary Energetikai. The Düsseldorf-based company said the divestment is part of the remedies it must fulfill under EU state aid law. The measures are related to the stabilization package that the European Commission approved for Uniper in late 2022, at the height of the energy crisis.

Active in more than 40 countries and with its core businesses in Germany, the United Kingdom, Sweden and the Netherlands, the company also owns hydropower plants and is expanding in the wind and solar power sectors. Uniper is a global energy trader, too, and operates gas storage.

The company has vowed to become carbon neutral by 2040 and to have an 80% share of zero-carbon power generating capacity by 2030. For decarbonization it relies on introducing green gases like hydrogen and biomethane and convert to them over the long term.

Uniper hired Wolf Theiss to advise it on all Hungarian legal, tax and regulatory aspects of the transaction.

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 drafts just transition action plan public debate

Serbia drafts just transition action plan

30 May 2025 - The Ministry of Mining and Energy has published a draft just transition action plan and launched a public debate

Regional Power Sector Exchange Western Balkans disitribution system operator dso grids ohrid giz

Third Regional Power Sector Exchange in Ohrid: Power grids at core of energy transition

30 May 2025 - The third Regional Power Sector Exchange of the Western Balkans gathered over 80 energy professionals from the Western Balkans

two solar power plants egesa enerji vojvodina

Turkish Egesa Enerji to build two solar power plants in Serbia’s Vojvodina province

30 May 2025 - Turkish company Egesa Enerji has launched a project to build two solar power plants in Vojvodina, with a total nominal capacity of 8.6 MW

Green for Growth Fund partnership Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency Sida

Green for Growth Fund launches partnership with Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency

30 May 2025 - GGF and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency are expanding green lending in the Western Balkans and the EU's Eastern Neighborhood