News

Montenegro gives green light for four solar plants totaling 127 MW

montenegro government requirements solar power plants uniprom kap

Published

March 17, 2025

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

March 17, 2025

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Investors in Montenegro plan to build four solar power plants with a combined capacity of 127 MW, three of which will be located on the territory of the country’s capital, Podgorica.

The Government of Montenegro has issued urban planning and technical requirements for the construction of the four solar power plants. All four companies that submitted requests for the issuance of urban planning and technical requirements are owned by private individuals.

The issuance of urban planning and technical requirements is one of the steps towards the construction of a solar power plant.

The largest of the four projects is the Bogetići photovoltaic power plant, with a maximum planned capacity of 67 MW, according to the decision issued by the Government of Montenegro.

The request was submitted by Podgorica-based TM Invest, and the planned site for the power plant is in the municipality of Nikšić.

The largest of the four projects has a capacity of 67 MW

Solar power plants Soluno, KAP, and KAP II should be installed on the territory of the Montenegrin capital, Podgorica. The maximum capacity of the Soluno solar power plant is 13.5 MW, and the applicant is Podgorica-based firm Soluno.

montenegro solar power plants uniprom kap

Solar power plants at KAP

Requests for solar power plants KAP and KAP II were submitted by Unipan Green. The maximum capacity for KAP is 33.75 MW and for KAP II, 12.9 MW.

Unipan Green is affiliated with aluminum producer Unipro KAP, also known as Kombinat Aluminijuma Podgorica.

Two projects are associated with Uniprom KAP

Former Minister of Mining and Energy, Saša Mujović, said during a visit to KAP last May that the company had already installed 2 MW of solar panels, with plans to increase the capacity to 12 MW.

The owner of Uniprom, Veselin Pejović, said at the time that installing solar panels would make the company fully independent from electricity supplied by state power utility Elektroprivreda Crne Gore (EPCG).

He also said that solar panels would ensure a green certificate for the company’s products, guaranteeing that production is powered by renewable energy sources.

In addition to these four power plants, a large number of other solar projects are being developed in Montenegro. The Montenegrin transmission system operator has so far signed seven contracts on building grid connection infrastructure, and many projects have received urban planning and technical requirements or submitted requests for environmental studies.

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

montenegro epcg nte energy norway memorandum bulatovic Inge Forseth

Montenegro’s EPCG, NTE Energy sign memorandum of understanding

30 July 2025 - The memorandum of understanding confirms mutual commitment to intensifying cooperation in the renewable energy sector in Montenegro

bulgaria sunotec sungrow bess battery storage

Sunotec, Sungrow sign 2.4 GWh battery storage agreement

29 July 2025 - China-based Sungrow and Bulgarian-German company Sunotec have agreed to install 2.4 GWh of battery energy storage systems in Europe

Council of Europe Romas disproportionately exposed environmental hazards North Macedonia

Council of Europe urges North Macedonia to improve environment, protect Romas from disproportionate risks

29 July 2025 - North Macedonia should bridge the gap between commitments and reality on human rights of Romas and environmental protection, the Council of Europe said

Two small hydropower turbines to be integrated with Sofia water supply lines

Two small hydropower turbines to be integrated into Sofia water supply lines

28 July 2025 - Veolia received a green light from Bulgaria's capital city to install two hydropower generators within the city's major water supply lines