intellinews.com<https://www.intellinews.com/serbia-seeks-eu-gas-supplies-to-reduce-reliance-on-russia-424423/?source=serbia>
Serbia seeks EU gas supplies to reduce reliance on Russia
By bne IntelliNews February 5, 2026
4–5 minutes
________________________________

Serbia is stepping up efforts to diversify its energy supplies away from Russia 
and is already in talks to purchase natural gas through the European Union’s 
joint gas-buying mechanism, President Aleksandar Vucic said in an interview 
with Reuters on February 4.

The Balkan country, which is seeking EU membership, remains one of Europe’s 
most energy-dependent states and among Europe’s few remaining buyers of Russian 
gas. More than 80% of Serbia’s gas supplies still come from Russia, but 
Brussels has been pressing Belgrade to find alternatives as the EU seeks to 
curb revenues flowing to Moscow amid the war in Ukraine.

“We have to adjust our energy policies to certain demands and requests,” Vucic 
told Reuters during the interview at the presidency in Belgrade, where he was 
flanked by an EU flag. “Still we will have big quantities of Russian gas, but 
we are taking more and more from Europeans.”

Serbia failed to secure a new long-term contract with Russia’s Gazprom last 
year, after Moscow declined to offer a multi-year deal in October 2025. A 
short-term agreement reached in December expires on March 31, leaving Belgrade 
reliant on temporary arrangements and Russia’s goodwill for access to 
relatively cheap gas.

Vucic said Serbia is aiming to secure around 500mn cubic metres of gas per year 
– roughly one-fifth of its annual demand – through the EU’s communal gas-buying 
initiative, which it joined last year. The country is already importing gas 
from Azerbaijan via Bulgaria, while construction of a pipeline to North 
Macedonia, which would provide access to liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals 
in Greece, is expected to start this year.

An oil pipeline linking Serbia with neighbouring Romania is due for completion 
in 2027, while additional gas and oil connections with Hungary and Romania are 
also planned. “This is a big diversification,” Vucic said in the interview.

Serbia imports nearly all of its gas – about 3bn cubic metres in 2024 – with 
domestic production covering only around 10% of needs. The government has 
launched a broader push to diversify gas and electricity supplies, expand 
renewable energy and attract foreign investment into energy infrastructure 
after years of underinvestment.

By the end of 2026, Belgrade aims to secure 1.3 GW of new renewable capacity 
through competitive auctions, covering solar, wind and energy storage. 
Meanwhile, domestic coal reserves are at record levels, while state gas company 
Srbijagas plans to double storage capacity at the Banatski Dvor facility.

Serbia is also reviving its nuclear ambitions. After lifting a decades-old ban 
in 2024, the government is exploring both large-scale nuclear plants and small 
modular reactors as part of its long-term energy strategy.

With new pipelines, storage projects and renewables capacity in the pipeline, 
alongside plans to incorporate hydrogen and expand regional cooperation on 
energy infrastructure, Serbia’s shift away from near-total reliance on Russian 
energy is expected to open up fresh opportunities for foreign direct investment 
across the sector.

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/PH0PR13MB544611A39D8D2A68480BE3C9AE67A%40PH0PR13MB5446.namprd13.prod.outlook.com.

Reply via email to