Renewables

SIDA grants EUR 2 million for Prijedor CHP plant

Published

April 14, 2015

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

April 14, 2015

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The contract for a donation in a biomass-powered district heating plant project in Prijedor was signed by the town’s mayor Marko Pavić and the representatives of European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) and a. d. Toplana Prijedor, the plant operator.

Pavić stated the EBRD approved a EUR 7 million loan, guaranteed by the City of Prijedor, and that SIDA granted EUR 2 million for boiler reconstruction, Glas Srpske portal said.

The mayor added Toplana’s total income is BAM 4.5 million (EUR 2.3 million) per year, while heavy fuel oil cost is BAM 5.5 million.

The selection of the contractor and the subsequent construction is underway, Pavić said.

The investment is aimed to replace the existing equipment with woodchip-fired technology, including buildings and access roads, biomass storage and a preparation-inclusive external wood chipper, flue-gas stack and cleaning, flue-gas condenser, instrumentation and control, electric installations and ash handling, EBRD said.

The planned capacity is 20 MW of heat and 1 MW of electricity for district heating for over 13,000 people. The bank’s country office head Ian Brown stated the decision to support the project was made because wood isn’t used enough as fuel in Bosnia and Herzegovina despite the abundance of the resource.

“We now see Prijedor as a leader in this technology in BiH and we think this project is a good demonstration and a good example for other cities in the country,” he said.

Marie Bergström, SIDA’s country office chief and Swedish embassy’s representative, said the organization’s total grant for the project is EUR 2.8 million. Another ambition is that the funds provided by Sweden for technical cooperation will lead to increased transparency regarding the district heating company’s operations, the Embassy of Sweden said.

“Through specific procurement and supervision assistance, the company will gain significant experience and expertise, thus ensuring the successful implementation of the project. Sweden’s investment grant will be used to introduce individual heat substations and heat meters in a selected number of buildings and flats. This should enable people to control their heat consumption. It should also enable fairer billing,” the press release said.

Related Articles

montenegro TNC eco team mapping low-conflict solar wind potential

Montenegro identifies 16.3 GW of low-conflict solar and wind potential

29 January 2026 - The Montenegro Energy Growth and Acceleration project was implemented by The Nature Conservancy and Montenegrin NGO Eco-Team

Record battery installations EU 2025 Bulgaria enters top 3

Record battery installations in EU in 2025 as Bulgaria enters top 3

28 January 2026 - The European Union added 27.1 GWh of battery capacity last year, marking a 12th consecutive record – driven by utility-scale storage

croatia ante susnjar minister renewables subsidies jutarnji list energy conference

Šušnjar: Croatia allocated EUR 4 billion so far to boost renewables; subsidies for wind, solar to end

28 January 2026 - Minister of Economy Ante Šušnjar said at an energy conference that the money could have been put to better use

Research project in Romania explores the use of agrisolar systems with batteries in agriculture

Researchers in Romania developing agrisolar system with batteries

27 January 2026 - An agrisolar power plant with batteries is being set up in a research and demonstration project in Romania