September 8, 2025
Owner's Engineer banner
HomeSEE Energy NewsBosnia and Herzegovina: RS electricity distributors seek higher network fees, potentially raising...

Bosnia and Herzegovina: RS electricity distributors seek higher network fees, potentially raising household bills by over 20%

Supported byClarion Energy

Electricity distribution system operators in the Republic of Srpska are pushing for an increase in distribution fees from 40.58% to 46.01%, citing higher costs for covering network losses. The move follows a decision by state-owned utility ERS to raise the price of electricity used for these losses from €55.7 to €77.7 per MWh, a 40% jump.

Operators submitted amended requests to the Regulatory Commission for Energy (RERS), which confirmed the applications and said a final decision will be made after the tariff procedure and public hearings. They argue the increase is necessary due to limited investment funds, higher maintenance costs, and rising depreciation expenses. If approved, the changes would take effect in January next year.

Network fees currently make up around half of a household electricity bill, meaning full approval could raise consumer bills by over 20%. While some increase is seen as inevitable, sources expect it will be smaller than requested, allowing the perception that operators did not get their full demand, even though consumers will still face higher costs.

Supported byVirtu Energy

The proposal has the backing of the RS Government. Energy and Mining Minister Petar Djokic recently met with distribution operators and said their demands are justified.

RELATED ARTICLES

Supported byOwner's Engineer
Supported byElevatePR Serbia
Supported byClarion Energy
Supported by
error: Content is protected !!