Review of Electricity Supply and Demand in Southeast Europe

This paper reviews the power sector demand-supply balance in Southeastern Europe (SEE), covering Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Romania, and Serbia and Montenegro (including Kosovo). The paper first looks at the actual balance over the period 1991-2001. After that, the forecast balance to 2012 is reviewed. The analysis is based on aggregated country level demand and capacity data provided by the electric utilities and supplemented drawing on published sources. The context for the paper is the agreement between the countries above, together with Greece and Turkey, to form a South Eastern Europe Regional Electricity Market (SEEREM).1 The objective is to identify the magnitude of generation investments to be made in the evolving market. The paper also proposes mechanisms to reduce investment requirements, namely energy efficiency improvements and increased trade, and provides a brief assessment of technical and institutional barriers to trade. The preliminary conclusion of the paper is that additional generating capacity of around 4,500 MW will be required over the next ten years, together with substantial rehabilitation of existing plant. The associated financing requirement would be well in excess of $5 billion. However, these figures reflect a significant degree of national energy self sufficiency. It is likely that less investment would be required if countries were to coordinate investments, with economies resulting due to heterogeneous resources, non coincidental peak requirements, and sharing of reserves. A regional least cost expansion plan is currently being developed as a follow up to the present study; this new study is to be financed by the EC and co-managed by the World Bank. The institutional framework to support increased trade is being developed as part of the SEEREM.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Atur, Varadarajan, Kennedy, David
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2004
Subjects:CARBON, CARBON DIOXIDE, CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS, CONSUMERS, DEMAND GROWTH, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC SITUATION, EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS, ELECTRIC POWER, ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION, ELECTRICITY DEMAND, ELECTRICITY GENERATION, ELECTRICITY PRICES, ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION, ELECTRICITY SUPPLY, ENERGY CONSUMPTION, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE, ENERGY INTENSITY, ENERGY PRICES, ENERGY SERVICES, FORECASTS, FUEL, FUEL SUBSTITUTION, GDP, GDP PER CAPITA, GENERATION CAPACITY, GLOBAL EMISSIONS, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, GROWTH RATE, LOAD DEMAND, LOAD GROWTH, LOAD MANAGEMENT, LOAD SHEDDING, NUCLEAR CAPACITY, OIL, OIL EQUIVALENT, OPTIMIZATION, PEAK DEMAND, POWER GENERATION, POWER PLANTS, POWER UTILITIES, PRICE INCREASES, REGIONAL ELECTRICITY, REGIONAL ELECTRICITY MARKET, TOTAL ELECTRICITY DEMAND, UTILITIES ELECTRICITY SUPPLY, REGIONAL TRADE, POWER SYSTEMS, INVESTMENTS, FINANCING, INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK, MACROECONOMIC ACTIVITY, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT PER CAPITA,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/10/2874717/review-electricity-supply-demand-southeast-europe
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15063
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098615063
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986150632024-08-08T17:38:53Z Review of Electricity Supply and Demand in Southeast Europe Atur, Varadarajan Kennedy, David CARBON CARBON DIOXIDE CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS CONSUMERS DEMAND GROWTH ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC SITUATION EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS ELECTRIC POWER ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION ELECTRICITY DEMAND ELECTRICITY GENERATION ELECTRICITY PRICES ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION ELECTRICITY SUPPLY ENERGY CONSUMPTION ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE ENERGY INTENSITY ENERGY PRICES ENERGY SERVICES FORECASTS FUEL FUEL SUBSTITUTION GDP GDP PER CAPITA GENERATION CAPACITY GLOBAL EMISSIONS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH RATE LOAD DEMAND LOAD GROWTH LOAD MANAGEMENT LOAD SHEDDING NUCLEAR CAPACITY OIL OIL EQUIVALENT OPTIMIZATION PEAK DEMAND POWER GENERATION POWER PLANTS POWER UTILITIES PRICE INCREASES REGIONAL ELECTRICITY REGIONAL ELECTRICITY MARKET TOTAL ELECTRICITY DEMAND UTILITIES ELECTRICITY SUPPLY ELECTRICITY DEMAND REGIONAL TRADE ELECTRICITY PRICES POWER SYSTEMS ELECTRICITY GENERATION CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS INVESTMENTS FINANCING INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK MACROECONOMIC ACTIVITY GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT PER CAPITA This paper reviews the power sector demand-supply balance in Southeastern Europe (SEE), covering Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Romania, and Serbia and Montenegro (including Kosovo). The paper first looks at the actual balance over the period 1991-2001. After that, the forecast balance to 2012 is reviewed. The analysis is based on aggregated country level demand and capacity data provided by the electric utilities and supplemented drawing on published sources. The context for the paper is the agreement between the countries above, together with Greece and Turkey, to form a South Eastern Europe Regional Electricity Market (SEEREM).1 The objective is to identify the magnitude of generation investments to be made in the evolving market. The paper also proposes mechanisms to reduce investment requirements, namely energy efficiency improvements and increased trade, and provides a brief assessment of technical and institutional barriers to trade. The preliminary conclusion of the paper is that additional generating capacity of around 4,500 MW will be required over the next ten years, together with substantial rehabilitation of existing plant. The associated financing requirement would be well in excess of $5 billion. However, these figures reflect a significant degree of national energy self sufficiency. It is likely that less investment would be required if countries were to coordinate investments, with economies resulting due to heterogeneous resources, non coincidental peak requirements, and sharing of reserves. A regional least cost expansion plan is currently being developed as a follow up to the present study; this new study is to be financed by the EC and co-managed by the World Bank. The institutional framework to support increased trade is being developed as part of the SEEREM. 2013-08-14T17:57:10Z 2013-08-14T17:57:10Z 2004 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/10/2874717/review-electricity-supply-demand-southeast-europe 0-8213-5633-X https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15063 English en_US World Bank Working Paper;No. 17 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC: World Bank
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic CARBON
CARBON DIOXIDE
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
CONSUMERS
DEMAND GROWTH
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC SITUATION
EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS
ELECTRIC POWER
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
ELECTRICITY PRICES
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE
ENERGY INTENSITY
ENERGY PRICES
ENERGY SERVICES
FORECASTS
FUEL
FUEL SUBSTITUTION
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GENERATION CAPACITY
GLOBAL EMISSIONS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATE
LOAD DEMAND
LOAD GROWTH
LOAD MANAGEMENT
LOAD SHEDDING
NUCLEAR CAPACITY
OIL
OIL EQUIVALENT
OPTIMIZATION
PEAK DEMAND
POWER GENERATION
POWER PLANTS
POWER UTILITIES
PRICE INCREASES
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY MARKET
TOTAL ELECTRICITY DEMAND
UTILITIES ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
REGIONAL TRADE
ELECTRICITY PRICES
POWER SYSTEMS
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
INVESTMENTS
FINANCING
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
MACROECONOMIC ACTIVITY
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT PER CAPITA
CARBON
CARBON DIOXIDE
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
CONSUMERS
DEMAND GROWTH
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC SITUATION
EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS
ELECTRIC POWER
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
ELECTRICITY PRICES
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE
ENERGY INTENSITY
ENERGY PRICES
ENERGY SERVICES
FORECASTS
FUEL
FUEL SUBSTITUTION
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GENERATION CAPACITY
GLOBAL EMISSIONS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATE
LOAD DEMAND
LOAD GROWTH
LOAD MANAGEMENT
LOAD SHEDDING
NUCLEAR CAPACITY
OIL
OIL EQUIVALENT
OPTIMIZATION
PEAK DEMAND
POWER GENERATION
POWER PLANTS
POWER UTILITIES
PRICE INCREASES
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY MARKET
TOTAL ELECTRICITY DEMAND
UTILITIES ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
REGIONAL TRADE
ELECTRICITY PRICES
POWER SYSTEMS
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
INVESTMENTS
FINANCING
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
MACROECONOMIC ACTIVITY
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT PER CAPITA
spellingShingle CARBON
CARBON DIOXIDE
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
CONSUMERS
DEMAND GROWTH
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC SITUATION
EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS
ELECTRIC POWER
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
ELECTRICITY PRICES
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE
ENERGY INTENSITY
ENERGY PRICES
ENERGY SERVICES
FORECASTS
FUEL
FUEL SUBSTITUTION
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GENERATION CAPACITY
GLOBAL EMISSIONS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATE
LOAD DEMAND
LOAD GROWTH
LOAD MANAGEMENT
LOAD SHEDDING
NUCLEAR CAPACITY
OIL
OIL EQUIVALENT
OPTIMIZATION
PEAK DEMAND
POWER GENERATION
POWER PLANTS
POWER UTILITIES
PRICE INCREASES
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY MARKET
TOTAL ELECTRICITY DEMAND
UTILITIES ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
REGIONAL TRADE
ELECTRICITY PRICES
POWER SYSTEMS
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
INVESTMENTS
FINANCING
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
MACROECONOMIC ACTIVITY
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT PER CAPITA
CARBON
CARBON DIOXIDE
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
CONSUMERS
DEMAND GROWTH
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC SITUATION
EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS
ELECTRIC POWER
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
ELECTRICITY PRICES
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE
ENERGY INTENSITY
ENERGY PRICES
ENERGY SERVICES
FORECASTS
FUEL
FUEL SUBSTITUTION
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GENERATION CAPACITY
GLOBAL EMISSIONS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATE
LOAD DEMAND
LOAD GROWTH
LOAD MANAGEMENT
LOAD SHEDDING
NUCLEAR CAPACITY
OIL
OIL EQUIVALENT
OPTIMIZATION
PEAK DEMAND
POWER GENERATION
POWER PLANTS
POWER UTILITIES
PRICE INCREASES
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY MARKET
TOTAL ELECTRICITY DEMAND
UTILITIES ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
REGIONAL TRADE
ELECTRICITY PRICES
POWER SYSTEMS
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
INVESTMENTS
FINANCING
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
MACROECONOMIC ACTIVITY
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT PER CAPITA
Atur, Varadarajan
Kennedy, David
Review of Electricity Supply and Demand in Southeast Europe
description This paper reviews the power sector demand-supply balance in Southeastern Europe (SEE), covering Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Romania, and Serbia and Montenegro (including Kosovo). The paper first looks at the actual balance over the period 1991-2001. After that, the forecast balance to 2012 is reviewed. The analysis is based on aggregated country level demand and capacity data provided by the electric utilities and supplemented drawing on published sources. The context for the paper is the agreement between the countries above, together with Greece and Turkey, to form a South Eastern Europe Regional Electricity Market (SEEREM).1 The objective is to identify the magnitude of generation investments to be made in the evolving market. The paper also proposes mechanisms to reduce investment requirements, namely energy efficiency improvements and increased trade, and provides a brief assessment of technical and institutional barriers to trade. The preliminary conclusion of the paper is that additional generating capacity of around 4,500 MW will be required over the next ten years, together with substantial rehabilitation of existing plant. The associated financing requirement would be well in excess of $5 billion. However, these figures reflect a significant degree of national energy self sufficiency. It is likely that less investment would be required if countries were to coordinate investments, with economies resulting due to heterogeneous resources, non coincidental peak requirements, and sharing of reserves. A regional least cost expansion plan is currently being developed as a follow up to the present study; this new study is to be financed by the EC and co-managed by the World Bank. The institutional framework to support increased trade is being developed as part of the SEEREM.
topic_facet CARBON
CARBON DIOXIDE
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
CONSUMERS
DEMAND GROWTH
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC SITUATION
EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS
ELECTRIC POWER
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
ELECTRICITY PRICES
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE
ENERGY INTENSITY
ENERGY PRICES
ENERGY SERVICES
FORECASTS
FUEL
FUEL SUBSTITUTION
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GENERATION CAPACITY
GLOBAL EMISSIONS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATE
LOAD DEMAND
LOAD GROWTH
LOAD MANAGEMENT
LOAD SHEDDING
NUCLEAR CAPACITY
OIL
OIL EQUIVALENT
OPTIMIZATION
PEAK DEMAND
POWER GENERATION
POWER PLANTS
POWER UTILITIES
PRICE INCREASES
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY
REGIONAL ELECTRICITY MARKET
TOTAL ELECTRICITY DEMAND
UTILITIES ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
REGIONAL TRADE
ELECTRICITY PRICES
POWER SYSTEMS
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS
INVESTMENTS
FINANCING
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
MACROECONOMIC ACTIVITY
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT PER CAPITA
author Atur, Varadarajan
Kennedy, David
author_facet Atur, Varadarajan
Kennedy, David
author_sort Atur, Varadarajan
title Review of Electricity Supply and Demand in Southeast Europe
title_short Review of Electricity Supply and Demand in Southeast Europe
title_full Review of Electricity Supply and Demand in Southeast Europe
title_fullStr Review of Electricity Supply and Demand in Southeast Europe
title_full_unstemmed Review of Electricity Supply and Demand in Southeast Europe
title_sort review of electricity supply and demand in southeast europe
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2004
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/10/2874717/review-electricity-supply-demand-southeast-europe
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15063
work_keys_str_mv AT aturvaradarajan reviewofelectricitysupplyanddemandinsoutheasteurope
AT kennedydavid reviewofelectricitysupplyanddemandinsoutheasteurope
_version_ 1809106316759662592