Industrial Accelerator Act reshapes low-carbon project readiness in South-East Europe
The European Commission’s proposed Industrial Accelerator Act (IAA) is being positioned as a competitiveness measure, but for engineering-led developers it […]
The European Commission’s proposed Industrial Accelerator Act (IAA) is being positioned as a competitiveness measure, but for engineering-led developers it […]
A new engineering requirement is emerging for Serbia’s export-facing manufacturers: electricity procurement is being redefined around carbon evidence, not just
Serbia’s renewable power pipeline is being reshaped by a new kind of buyer requirement: not just electricity delivery, but carbon-adjusted
European importers are tightening sourcing controls ahead of the full financial rollout of the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, pushing
Europe’s next wave of critical minerals infrastructure is shifting from extraction-led projects toward midstream processing capacity, where ores and concentrates
CBAM moves from reporting to payments The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism entered its definitive phase on 1 January 2026, introducing
Serbia’s 2025 industrial performance confirms that the country can compete as an export-oriented manufacturer, but it also exposes a development
Europe’s push to localize processing for lithium, rare earths and battery metals is increasingly being stress-tested by a single operational
Serbia’s challenge around CBAM-exposed exports is increasingly being treated as an engineering delivery problem rather than a market narrative. The
Serbia’s CBAM challenge is increasingly shaping how industrial developers plan renewable supply, not just how companies report emissions. From 2026,
Starting 1 January 2026, electricity moving from Energy Community Contracting Parties into the EU will fall explicitly under CBAM, adding
CBAM compliance starts in 2026, targeting embedded emissions across key export sectors Serbia’s industrial competitiveness is entering a new engineering