Renewables

OMV eyes Serbia, Bulgaria for investments in renewables

OMV eyes Serbia Bulgaria investments renewables

Photo: Kurt Prinz / Drone Project / OMV Aktiengesellschaft

Published

August 1, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

August 1, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

OMV intends to expand its renewables business in Southeast Europe. The company said Romania, Serbia, Bulgaria and Hungary have great wind and solar power potential.

Austrian oil, gas and chemicals group OMV has been undergoing a major transformation toward clean technologies. As it presented the results from the first half of the year, Chief Executive Officer Alfred Stern pointed out that the company wants to expand its renewables investments in Southeast Europe, adding that Romania, Serbia, Bulgaria and Hungary have great wind and solar power potential.

It already has a substantial presence in the electricity market in Romania, where its OMV Petrom subsidiary operates an 860 MW gas-fired power plant. The company already said in June that it is looking for opportunities in the renewables segment in the region.

Stern declared that OMV is no longer dependent on natural gas from Russia.

Growing green energy portfolio in Romania

OMV Petrom is developing plans, with coal power plant operator Complexul Energetic Oltenia (CE Oltenia), for four solar power projects with a combined capacity of 450 MW. Additionally, it has bought photovoltaic projects of an overall 710 MW in the country.

The Romanian subsidiary holds a 50% stake in the firm Electrocentrale Borzești, which has a 1 GW renewables project pipeline of 950 MW from wind and 50 MW from solar. OMV Petrom also expanded its partnership with Renovatio through the acquisition of a 50% stake in renewable energy projects amounting to 130 MW.

The company is investing in biofuels and green hydrogen in Romania as well as in a facility for renewable diesel components in its Schwechat refinery in Austria.

Bets on CCS, geothermal energy

The group obtained a second license in Norway in June for carbon capture and storage (CCS), in a project in which it holds 30%. The Iroko site in the Norwegian North Sea has a capacity of 215 million tons of carbon dioxide, OMV said and added that it would be able to take in 7.5 million tons per year.

Its low carbon business targets reaching 4 TWh of geothermal energy, 3 TWh to 4 TWh of renewable electricity and three million tons of CCS capacity per year by 2030. OMV vowed to invest EUR 5 billion in the division by the end of the decade.

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

ElevenEs heavyweights on board LFP battery cell factory project

ElevenEs brings heavyweights on board LFP battery cell factory project

18 February 2026 - ElevenEs has completed the first closing of its series B investment round backed by Caterpillar Venture Capital and an affiliate of BST (HK)

Ministry of Energy Mining and Mineral Resources North Macedonia MoU Balkan Green Energy News Branislava Jovicic Sanja Bozinovska Balkan Energy Forum BEF 2026

Ministry of Energy, Mining and Mineral Resources of North Macedonia signs MoU with Balkan Green Energy News on cooperation and partnership

17 February 2026 - The Ministry of Energy, Mining and Mineral Resources of North Macedonia will expand its cooperation with Balkan Green Energy News in advancing the energy transition in the region

First Greek batteries to claim up to 157.000 euros per MW this year

First Greek batteries to claim up to EUR 157.000 per MW in 2026

17 February 2026 - The first standalone batteries to enter the system in Greece will get significant income, according to the electricity distribution system operator

serbia azerbaijan gas fired power plant agreement

Serbia, Azerbaijan sign agreement to build gas-fired power plant

16 February 2026 - The combined cycle plant is expected to have an installed capacity of around 500 MW, with the investment estimated at EUR 600 million