Electricity as a production input vs electricity as a risk factor in Serbia
In Serbia’s industrial economy, electricity has quietly crossed a conceptual threshold. What was once treated as a stable production input—priced, […]
In Serbia’s industrial economy, electricity has quietly crossed a conceptual threshold. What was once treated as a stable production input—priced, […]
For decades, Serbia’s industrial model was implicitly designed around a power system that rewarded constancy. Factories ran continuously, furnaces stayed
For most of the last two decades Serbia’s industrial competitiveness was framed around familiar variables: labour cost, tax stability, logistics
Europe’s decarbonisation agenda is accelerating faster in steel and metallurgy than in almost any other heavy industry. The European Green
Europe’s industrial transition cannot proceed without rare-earth elements and the magnet materials derived from them. The motors that drive electric
Europe’s drive for strategic autonomy in raw materials and electrification metals is entering a decisive phase. The continent’s ability to
Europe’s race to rebuild its metals, minerals and advanced-materials ecosystem is reshaping industrial strategy across the continent. Smelters, refineries, processing
Europe’s ambition to achieve strategic autonomy in raw materials does not rest on geology alone. It hinges on the continent’s
Europe’s transformation into a battery-centered industrial economy has been faster and more disruptive than any other modern materials shift. The
Serbia stands at an industrial crossroads. The country has spent the past decade quietly building a reputation for engineering capability,
Europe stands at a critical juncture where policy ambition exceeds industrial capability. Through ReSourceEU, the EU has set measurable objectives:
Europe’s pursuit of strategic autonomy in raw materials, electrification metals and industrial processing capacity is entering a decade defined by