Hybrid energy enables a significant increase in electricity output without adding any extra load to the grid, according to the company. Wind farm Katuni has an annual output of about 80 GWh, and the new solar power plant will add another 45 GWh, making overall production at the hybrid facility sufficient to cover the average annual consumption of more than 35,000 households.
The Katuni hybrid power plant project, worth €30 million, has been under development for three years. The project has already obtained environmental approval, and it will use the existing grid connection.
Zoran Obradović, managing director of wpd Adria, says the company is moderately cautious when it comes to deadlines because it has been waiting for the adoption of by-laws for new projects in Croatia for almost two years, due to a regulatory vacuum created in 2016.
The Katuni hybrid power plant project was presented during a visit to the facility by German Ambassador Christian Helbach. He said that Croatia has great renewable energy potential and that it should swiftly and efficiently implement the energy transition, which he stressed is necessary for decarbonization and independence from energy imports.
“Such an opportunity for a country with great natural potential like Croatia will not last forever and should be seized in the next few years,” said Hellbach.
wpd, through its subsidiary wpd Adria, is developing more than 1,500 MW in projects in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia, and Montenegro.
In addition to Katuni in Šestanovac, in Dalmatia, wpd has built two wind farms near Šibenik – Trtar-Krtolin and Orlice – as well as the Ponikve facility on the Pelješac peninsula. With a total of 92 MW of installed capacity, wpd delivers around 220 GWh of clean energy to the Croatian power system every year.