Williamson Battery Technologies delivers advanced lithium battery systems, solid-state energy storage, battery thermal management (BTMS), intelligent EMS, industrial rack cabinets, telecom power syste...
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These patterns indicate the potential for diversifying Croatia's clean energy sources and reducing the vulnerability of relying heavily on a single energy type. Croatia's electricity mix includes 27% Hydropower, 17% Wind and 13% Gas. Low-carbon generation peaked in 2023.
Croatia's Energy Supply & Demand: Croatia's energy mix relies heavily on hydropower, with oil and gas production declining. Total energy consumption grew 1.5% in 2024, with renewables covering 30%. Electricity generation is hydropower-dependent, and CO 2 intensity is low. Oil and gas imports are rising, while coal use has halved since 2010.
Croatia's Energy Companies: HEP, a state-owned firm, dominates Croatia's electricity market, generating 70% of power and supplying over 90% of retail sales. INA is the sole oil and gas producer. The electricity sector was restructured in 2013, with HEP split into five entities.
In March 2025, the Croatian government updated its Energy Strategy for the period until 2030, with an outlook through 2050. The Strategy includes a wide range of energy policy initiatives that will improve energy security, increase energy efficiency, lower dependence on fossil fuels, increase local production, and increase renewable resources.
Therefore, energy statistics are one of the important tools for monitoring energy production and consumption, and an indicator in which direction energy policies can and should move. Total
Energy in Croatia describes energy and electricity production, consumption and import in Croatia. As of 2023, Croatia imported about 54.54% of the total energy consumed annually: 78.34% of its oil
Croatia Electricity: Available for Inland Market data was reported at 1,581.000 GWh in Nov 2025. This records an increase from the previous number of 1,533.000 GWh for Oct 2025. Croatia Electricity:
2 Sources: EU Commission Energy Statistics of the EU-27 Countries (2025); World Small Hydropower Development Report 2022; Used by permission of the World Energy Council (2013).
A positive shift was brought by other renewable energy sources — solar power plants, wind farms, biomass, and biogas — which for the first time held the leading position in the energy
Croatia is a net importer of electricity and gas, with a CO 2 intensity 66% lower than the global average. - Croatia''s Energy Use & Price by Sector: Croatia''s final energy consumption has
Croatia''s electricity mix includes 27% Hydropower, 17% Wind and 13% Gas. Low-carbon generation peaked in 2023.
Croatia''s National Energy Strategy 2009-2020 has three basic objectives: increase security of energy supply, develop competitive energy system and ensure sustainable energy sector
Croatia has significant potential for the use of renewable energy sources, including solar energy, wind energy, hydro energy, and geothermal power. 30 percent of energy currently consumed
Croatia''s electricity system is shaped less by industrial baseload or export ambition and more by seasonality. Few European systems experience such a sharp divergence between winter
High-density LiFePO4 and solid-state battery modules with integrated BMS and advanced thermal runaway prevention – ideal for industrial peak shaving and renewable integration.
Active liquid-cooled thermal management combined with AI-driven energy management systems (EMS) for optimal battery performance, safety, and predictive analytics.
Modular energy storage rack cabinets (IP55) and telecom power systems (-48V DC) for data centers, telecom towers, and industrial backup applications.
Solar-storage-charging (S2C) hubs and UL9540A certified containerized BESS (up to 5MWh) for utility-scale projects and microgrids.
We provide advanced lithium battery systems, solid-state storage, battery thermal management (BTMS), intelligent EMS, industrial rack cabinets, telecom power systems, solar-storage-charging (S2C) integration, and UL9540A certified containers for commercial, industrial, and renewable energy projects across Europe and globally.
From project consultation to after-sales support, our engineering team ensures safety, reliability, and performance.
Industriestraße 22, Gewerbegebiet Nord, 70469 Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
+49 711 984 2705 | +49 160 947 8321 | [email protected]