
The final average price for the PV technology came in at €0.056 ($0.065)/kWh, while the average price for hydropower was €0.158/kWh.. The final average price for the PV technology came in at €0.056 ($0.065)/kWh, while the average price for hydropower was €0.158/kWh.. The auction concluded with an average price of €0.056 ($0.065)/kWh for the PV technology. The Croatian Energy Market Operator (HROTE) has announced the final results of the renewable energy auction it launched in April. The procurement exercise was the second round of auctions since Croatia. . Below are the average monthly bills of households with an average consumption of 350 kWh per month: November 2024. The total increase in bills from 2022 to 2025 is 7,35 EUR, which is the growth of 36,9%. 1. Fixed solar power plants 2. Portable solar power plants 3. Battery generators To show a. . Croatia receives an average of approximately 2,000 to 2,700 hours of sunshine annually, depending on the specific region: 1 Southern Adriatic (e.g., Dubrovnik, Hvar): around 2,700 to 2,800 hours annually. Northern Adriatic (e.g., Rijeka, Pula): around 2,000 to 2,400 hours annually. Continental. [pdf]
The maximum reference values of market premiums for solar were €0.82/kWh and €0.75/kWh for wind. The first auction for large-scale projects in Croatia took place in 2022 to procure 638 MW of new capacity. However, it only attracted tepid interest, with premiums awarded to just 107 MW of projects.
The final average price for the PV technology came in at €0.056 ($0.065)/kWh, while the average price for hydropower was €0.158/kWh. The Croatian authorities initially reviewed 144 projects totaling 713 MW for the auction. The tender was carried out in two phases.
The Croatian authorities initially reviewed 144 projects totaling 713 MW for the auction. The tender was carried out in two phases. One awarded market premiums for projects with installed capacities of more than 1 MW each, including 350 MW of solar, 60 MW of wind, and 7.25 MW of hydropower.
The maximum reference values for premiums were €0.067/kWh for photovoltaics, €0.75/kWh for wind, and €0.158/kWh for hydropower. The other part of the tender procedure awarded premiums for solar projects with capacities ranging from 200 kW to 6 MW, and wind farms with capacities from 200 kW to 18 MW.

Solar power in Hungary has been rapidly advancing due to government support and declining system prices. By the end of 2023 Hungary had just over 5.8 GW of photovoltaics capacity, a massive increase from a decade prior. Solar power accounted for 24.8% of the country's electricity generation in 2024, up from less than 0.1% in 2010. In 2023, the country's Minister of Energy, Csaba Lantos, pre. See also• • • •. . • (in Hungarian)• •. [pdf]

▪100% lower network tariffor storage devices with an in-built capacity above 0,5 MW with aFRR accreditation, only until end of 2026 ▪Electricity producers do not pay newtork tarif –also for storage installments during feeding-in ▪The new grid connection procedure will prefer co-located storage installments (hybrid systems) ▪Map of such solar power plants in function with an in-built capacity of at least 0.5 MW which have spare grid connection capacity –possibility for co-location for batteries. [pdf]
With funds obtained within a previous program, the country’s transmission system operator MAVIR is already building a 20 MW energy storage system in Szolnok in central Hungary, the ministry noted.
The EU has approved a $1.2bn state aid funding package for 800MW of energy storage in Hungary as the country seeks to up its renewables.
The Alliance currently has 84 members. The Association’s annual highlight event is the Hungarian Battery Day. Professional leader: Fanni Mészáros, email: [email protected] For further information, visit the Association’s website, and LinkedIn page!
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