Beyond engineering and market risks, wind‑park investors must manage environmental and social impacts. Projects can face community opposition over noise, visual impact or ecological concerns. Early…
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Securing a reliable grid connection is fundamental to monetizing wind‑park output. Transmission constraints or curtailment policies can limit the ability to export electricity, eroding revenue. Investors…
Wind‑energy projects depend heavily on supportive regulatory frameworks. Sudden changes in feed‑in tariffs, grid‑access rules or permitting processes can disrupt project economics. Investors should monitor government…
From an Owner’s Engineer’s vantage point, Southeast Europe’s onshore wind market is entering a defining phase—where investor capital, construction excellence, and policy reliability must intersect with…
Investing in a wind park is fundamentally about converting a natural resource into predictable cash flows. In Southeast Europe, supportive policy frameworks and the region’s wind…
Montenegro is not the largest renewable market in Southeast Europe. It does not have Romania’s vast plains, Serbia’s gigawatt-scale ambition, or Croatia’s deep EU grid integration.…
Montenegro’s north — from Kolašin to Žabljak, from Berane to Plav, from Rožaje to Bijelo Polje — holds the country’s greatest untapped economic potential. For decades,…
Tivat and Kotor, though distinct in history, architecture and identity, form one of the most powerful maritime economic ecosystems in the Mediterranean. Together, they represent the yachting…
Foreign investors entering Montenegro today stand at a rare inflection point. The economy is still small, regulation still flexible, and valuations still below EU levels —…
Foreign direct investment in Montenegro does not arrive randomly. It comes in distinct waves from specific countries, each bringing its own strategic logic, risk appetite and…


