Slovenia's total installed PV capacity stood at just 267 MW by the end of 2020, on new annual additions of just 3 MW. Most of its existing capacity comes from rooftop PV installed in 2012 (122 MW),...
In Slovenia, electricity from renewable sources is promoted through a feed-in tariff (so called "guaranteed purchase") and a premium tariff (so called "operating premium"), both granted through a...
Projects below 500 kW in Slovenia can continue to receive a feed-in tariff (FiT). Operators of bigger systems will offer the produced power on the market and get a premium on top of the market price.
Through mid-summer 2013, the Slovenian FIT program had installed 3,200 plants with a combined capacity of 460 MW in the nation of two million inhabitants. In the first half of 2013, 50 MW were added,...[more]
On 30.6.2013 the feed-in system included 3190 power plants with a combined installed capacity of 461 MWe (this figure includes the TE-TOL CHP power plant with an installed capacity of 113 MWe).
This document includes all the information needed by a potential investor for the realisation of their business idea, from the initial activities to the final project implementation.
The Slovenian Feed-in scheme is managed by Borzen, the Slovenian power market operator. A the end of 2012 there were 2543 power plants included with a combined installed capacity of 375 MW. This...
Guaranteed purchase means that a power plant enters the Centre for RES/CHP support’s balance group that operates within Borzen. In such a case the beneficiary sells electricity to the Centre for...
By late 2010 Slovenia's regulatory authority was reporting that the country's feed-in tariffs had resulted in contracts for 1,100 MW of new renewable energy development, mostly hydro. In 2010,...[more]
Slovenia, the first independent country recognized after the breakup of Yugoslavia, was expected to launch a sophisticated system of feed-in tariffs on July 12, 2009. However, the program has been...[more]