FelicityESS uses our innovative technology and high-quality products to help Romania and other countries achieve energy transformation and jointly promote a green future.
In April, Romania''s largest battery storage system, of 24 MWh, was put into operation. It is the first phase of a project totaling 216 MWh. The facility is connected to the Mireasa wind farm of 50 MW, while a 35 MW solar
This week, Vienna-based Enery has commissioned a major solar and storage site in northwestern Romania. The project consists of a 51.4 MW PV plant and and a battery energy storage facility of 22 MWh.
FelicityESS uses our innovative technology and high-quality products to help Romania and other countries achieve energy transformation and jointly promote a green future.
The storage unit, with an installed capacity of 24 MWh, has been built in the Constanța county in Romania by Monsson, based on Prime Batteries Technology solutions. It is the first out of three stages with a total planned
In April, Romania''s largest battery storage system, of 24 MWh, was put into operation. It is the first phase of a project totaling 216 MWh. The facility is connected to the Mireasa wind farm of 50 MW, while a 35 MW solar power plant is
The investment wave, supported by key regulatory changes, is elevating Romania in the European energy landscape. Leading the development is Nova Power & Gas, part of the Romanian E-Infra Group, which has unveiled plans for
An advanced draft of the present report was critically discussed with relevant Romanian stakeholders (TSO, energy regulator, Ministry of Economy, Energy and the Business Environment, DSOs, renewable energy producers, etc.)
Romania''s Ministry of Energy has reached two additional milestones under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) related to battery storage capacities and photovoltaic panel production.
This week, Vienna-based Enery has commissioned a major solar and storage site in northwestern Romania. The project consists of a 51.4 MW PV plant and and a battery energy storage facility of 22 MWh.
Romania''s Ministry of Energy has reached two additional milestones under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) related to battery storage capacities and photovoltaic panel production.
The storage unit, with an installed capacity of 24 MWh, has been built in the Constanța county in Romania by Monsson, based on Prime Batteries Technology solutions. It is the first out of three stages with a total planned capacity of
The investment wave, supported by key regulatory changes, is elevating Romania in the European energy landscape. Leading the development is Nova Power & Gas, part of the Romanian E-Infra Group, which has unveiled
The energy storage sector is growing rapidly in Romania and will "boom", said Vlad Doicaru, Vice President Huawei Technologies. "The storage sector is growing the most because until now there have been no relevant projects in Romania, but this year we expect a boom," Doicaru said.
In an accelerated wave of investments, companies in Romania are combining battery energy storage systems (BESS) with solar, hydro or wind energy, or building independent storage facilities. The list includes big names such as Verbund, Engie R.Power, Hidroelectrica.
Here are all the energy storage facilities in Romania now, according to Transelectrica data: "2024 was the year of the launch of storage in Romania. By the end of 2024, we had collected battery energy storage facilities totaling 137 MW and 269 MWh of capacity.
In its first, the Romanian government has allocated EU funds for two major battery energy storage projects via its National Recovery and Resilience Plan. A utility-scale solar-plus-storage site in the country’s northwest has flipped the switch.
Romania aims to exponentially grow its energy storage fleet over the next couple of years, as it works on its plan to deliver 36% of the nation’s energy to come from renewables by 2030, with 8.3 GW of solar and 7.6 GW of wind, and phase out coal by 2032.
Earlier this month, Burduja reported progress on what he terms as “the most important project for the Romanian energy system” – the 1 GW Tarnița-Lăpuștești pumped storage hydropower plant. Romania resumed the development of the project last year, upping the planned capacity from 500 MW to 1 GW.