HELLENiQ ENERGY Opens Two New Solar Parks in Romania – tovima.com

According to the minister, Olympia Odos, a modern motorway that connects Athens with Patras and the Peloponnese region, now covers all its energy needs through renewable sources.
HELLENiQ ENERGY Holdings has completed the commissioning and commencement of commercial operations of two solar photovoltaic parks in southern Romania with a combined capacity of 58 MW, the Greek energy group announced.
The plants form part of a 2023 agreement with METLEN for the construction and acquisition of four photovoltaic parks totalling 211 MW. The remaining two projects, with a combined capacity of 153 MW, are expected to be handed over and brought online during 2026.
With the latest additions, HELLENiQ ENERGY’s total renewable energy portfolio in Romania now exceeds 850 MW, reinforcing the group’s position in what it described as a growing market while advancing the international diversification of its asset base.

The Romanian portfolio spans a mix of technologies, comprising both solar and wind installations alongside energy storage systems — a combination the company said enhances the flexibility and resilience of the regional energy grid.
Group-wide, HELLENiQ ENERGY’s total installed renewable capacity in operation now stands at 564 MW, spread across four countries in Southeastern Europe: Greece, Cyprus, North Macedonia and Romania.
HELLENiQ ENERGY is one of the leading energy groups in Southeast Europe.

The Greek island landed a four-page feature in En Voyage, the in-flight magazine of UK-based carrier Aurigny Flights
The fuel cap on profit margins, the exact amount of which will be decided at a prior stage, is reportedly expected to take effect immediately
MGO in maritime transport “breaks” the $1,000 barrier – discussion opens on potential ticket price increases for the summer
Booming live entertainment to act as the third pillar of growth
Greek tourism has not yet been hit by the Middle East conflict, but industry leaders are closely monitoring bookings as uncertainty grows. Analysts say Greece could benefit from redirected travel demand, if the crisis ends soon.
© 2025 TOVIMA.COM • All rights reserved.

source

This entry was posted in Renewables. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply