The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) is providing a sovereign loan of up to 105 million euros to Serbia, through the Ministry of Finance, to benefit Novosadska Toplana Novi Sad, the district heating company of Novi Sad. The project is expected to be co-financed by an investment grant of up to 21 million euros, plus tree million euros of project implementation assistance, from the European Union (EU) and other donors through the Western Balkans Investment Framework (WBIF).
The loan will finance the construction of a large-scale solar-thermal power plant in Novi Sad, featuring 38,600 m² of solar collector fields, an 850,000 m³ seasonal heat storage system, a 17 megawatt (MW) heat pump and a 60 MW electric boiler, incorporating advanced power-to-heat technology.
The project is part of the Green Cities Window 3 Framework (GrCF3 W2 Framework) and is included in the Green City Action Plan (GCAP) being developed by the City of Novi Sad. Through the GCAP, the city has identified and prioritised its most pressing environmental challenges and set out targeted investments and policy actions to address them. The project will be implemented by Novosadska Toplana Novi Sad in conjunction with the Ministry of Mining and Energy, the city of Novi Sad, and state power company Elektroprivreda Srbije (EPS).
More:
- The Energy Sector Rated Highest According to the White Book of the Foreign Investors Council
- What Changes in the Energy Law Bring for the Renewable Energy Sector
- Proposed Law on Amendments to the Energy Law: What Changes are Being Introduced?
Producing more than 118,000 MWh of clean renewable heat energy annually, the project will reduce the district heating agency’s natural gas consumption by around 29 per cent. It will thus provide an efficient, reliable and environmentally friendly heat supply for households, public institutions and businesses in Novi Sad by delivering base heat energy capacity to the city’s district heating network using innovative technologies, while supporting Serbia’s efforts to decarbonise the sector.
In addition, seasonal thermal energy storage, combined with power-to-heat solutions, will enable the storage of surplus electricity from renewables, enhancing grid balancing capacity, supporting electricity market operations and reducing investment risks for new wind and solar photovoltaic (PV) renewable energy projects.
The loan agreement was signed by Siniša Mali, First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance of Serbia, while the project agreement was signed by Dubravka Đedović Handanović, Minister of Mining and Energy, and Nenad Barac, Director of Novosadska Toplana. Both agreements were signed by Matteo Colangeli, EBRD Regional Head of the Western Balkans, on behalf of the Bank.
„This project is innovative beyond Serbia and the region. The renewable energy solutions it will deliver to provide heat to Novi Sad and to balance the country’s electricity system, as well as the scale of the project, are groundbreaking on an international level. We are proud to support Novi Sad in this transformative investment, which will contribute to better air quality and cleaner, more affordable energy. With this loan, the EBRD closes 2024 with over 800 million euros of new investments in Serbia, underscoring our strong commitment to the country’s sustainable economic development”, said EBRD Director Matteo Colangeli.
„Efforts to decarbonise our energy sector cannot be complete if we do not include the production of thermal energy, which accounts for a significant share of the energy balance. We took the first steps by building four biomass heating plants, and I believe that the integration of a solar collector and a heat pump that uses the heat of the river Danube into the district heating system of Novi Sad will be a turning point that will show the way that other cities and municipalities in Serbia will follow. Thermal energy produced in a sustainable manner will cover more than 20 percent of Novi Sad’s heating needs, which will replace the consumption of more than 16 million cubic meters of natural gas. The project is unique in Serbia, in that it also includes an electric boiler for balancing excess electricity, which will provide additional capacity for balancing energy produced in solar and wind power plants”, said Dubravka Đedović Handanović, Mining and Energy Minister.
The EBRD is a leading institutional investor in Serbia and has invested more than nine billion euros through 367 projects to date, the majority of which have supported the private sector. The Bank’s focus in Serbia is on supporting private-sector competitiveness, the green energy transition and sustainable infrastructure.
Source: EBRD