Renewables

Investors plan 17,500 MW of new renewable energy capacity by 2033 in Bulgaria – TSO

bulgaria renewables eso solar wind

Photo: Myriams-Fotos from Pixabay

Published

August 20, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

August 20, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Investors are planning to build power plants with a total installed capacity of 19,000 MW in Bulgaria by 2033, according to the data presented by the country’s transmission system operator.

Renewable energy facilities including solar, wind, and hydropower account for 90% of the planned facilities or 17,500 MW, TSO Electricity System Operator said in its Ten-Year Plan for the Development of the Electricity Transmission Network, BNR reported.

It calculated the projection based on intentions expressed by investors. The majority or 85% of renewable energy projects are for solar power plants.

Of note, Bulgaria hosts the largest photovoltaic plant in the Balkans and Eastern Europe. Only this year, up to 1,500 MW of new solar capacity is expected to be connected to the grid.

The projections don’t include a possible new nuclear power plant

ESO said the projections don’t include a possible new nuclear power plant, explaining it is a complex process and that a long time is required for construction.

Bulgaria is preparing to build its new nuclear facility. In February, Hyundai Engineering and Construction has been shortlisted as a potential contractor for the construction of a nuclear power plant in the country’s northwest.

The country will transform from an exporter to importer of electricity

The country’s TSO underlined that the country would be transformed from an exporter to an electricity importer over the coming years. One of the reasons is the drop in coal power plant output due to the high cost of CO2 emissions, the plan reads.

ESO said that without financial support, coal plants would stop making electricity. The new reality started to set in in mid-2019, the company added.

Of note, in June Bulgaria had the weakest electricity production since 2019  as coal plant output slumped 19% year over year. ContourGlobal had to fire almost all workers at its Maritsa East 3 coal-fired power plant while state-owned Maritsa East 2 got a one-year lifeline from the government.

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

dri romania dtek romania glodeni ruginoasa wind

Ukrainian firm buys 60 MW solar project in Romania

23 August 2024 - DRI is rapidly increasing its presence in Romania. Just two months ago, it acquired its third project in the country - a 126 MW solar park

law on energy nuclear power plants

Serbia drafs changes to Law on Energy

22 August 2024 - Public consultations on the draft law on changes and amendments to the Law on Energy will last until September 10

ESO registers 45 5 surge green electricity Bulgarian transmission grid

ESO registers 45.5% surge in green electricity in Bulgarian transmission grid

21 August 2024 - ESO said total volume of wind, solar and biomass in the transmission grid jumped 45.5% from the beginning of 2024 on a year-to-year basis

Bulgaria launches call for grants for standalone energy storage units

Bulgaria launches call for grants for standalone energy storage units

21 August 2024 - Bulgaria prepared EUR 589 million in grants for standalone energy storage projects. The deadline for applications is November 21.