News

Tendering process open for hydro plant Bočac 2 construction

Published

May 12, 2015

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

May 12, 2015

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Company Hidroelektrane na Vrbasu (HEV) a. d. Mrkonjić Grad, hydropower plant operator from the west of Republic of Srpska entity, published a tender for the construction of Bočac 2 facility on Vrbas river.

The estimated value of the construction works project is BAM 17 million (EUR 8.7 million), while the overall expenses, according to earlier announcements, are BAM 40 million. The power plant should be operational by the end of next year and it is supposed to be built on the compensation lake, 7.3 kilometers downstream from the original plant. Its projected capacity is 10 MW which makes it a mini power plant, HEV’s press release said. Bočac 1 was built from 1976 to 1981. It has an installed capacity of 110 MW.

Related Articles

European Commission presents Grids Package faster permitting, stronger interconnections and lower energy bills

EU presents European Grids Package: faster permitting, stronger interconnections, lower energy bills

11 December 2025 - The European Commission presented the Grid Package and eight energy highways, aiming to accelerate electrification, connect markets, and reduce energy costs

montenegro necp law on cross border exchange electricity natural gas sahmanovic

Montenegro adopts National Energy and Climate Plan

10 December 2025 - The government adopted the National Energy and Climate Plan and the draft law on cross-border exchange of electricity and natural gas

Greek authorities launch electricity market probe

Greek authorities launch electricity market probe

10 December 2025 - HCC and RAAEY began a double probe into the Greek electricity market for potential manipulation

eu energy system 2050 net zero scenarios costs hitachi study

Energy system based on renewables is cheapest solution to achieve net zero by 2050 – study

10 December 2025 - The study, produced by Hitachi Energy for WindEurope, has mapped out the total system costs of five energy scenarios