K E SCO slams MPs with ZERE members

Power supply K The ESCO, which is KED property, continues to be monopoly on the Kosovo market. All this because two other operators licensed by the Power Regulatory Office are out of office, KTV reports. Thus, the single operation in our country has been made available to this company. These comments [...]
Power supply K The ESCO, which is KED property, continues to be monopoly on the Kosovo market.
All this because two other operators licensed by the Power Regulatory Office are out of office, KTV reports.
Thus, the single operation in our country has been made available to this company.
These comments by the deputies of the Commission for Economic Development followed the report by the head of the ERE before the Commission for the annual report we left behind.
Hykmete Bajrami raised concern why the ZERE continues to license other suppliers, as it has recently done, with the licensing of three other companies.
According to her, Z THE RRE is not offered conditions for operation, since the exclusive right to the energy produced by KEK alone has KESCO.
Even the chairman of this commission, Dardan Sejdiu, said the ZRRE should accept that companies are not equal, since, according to him, the sale of the KED distribution has created such a situation.
But, members of the ZERE board, argued that the supplier must find consumers himself, because, as they said, their malfunction results in the fact that energy should be purchased in other countries, which, according to them, makes it impossible for the event because they don't have an account.
Members of the ZERE Board have been embarrassed by MP Sejdiu, who addressed them with many questions regarding the “New Kosovo thermal power plant.
Sejdiu urged them to assess how much this investment will cost Kosovo and to know whether there will be an increase in the price of electricity following the operation of this thermal power plant.
During the report, it said the ZERE has attracted the amount of resources for the four northern municipalities of 3.5 per cent, whose bills have paid citizens of the rest of Kosovo.












