
All businesses without exception must bring TAK documents to be part of regulated tariffs
As part of the process of liberalizing the electricity market, KESCO explains that based on the ERO decision, all those that do not have more than 50 employees or have less than 10 million euros in turnover can continue to be supplied with regulated tariffs.
However, in order to continue supplying with regulated tariffs through universal supply, all companies without exception must bring evidence from TAK by March 21, 2025
These two documents must be brought to one of KESCO's customer service centers located throughout Kosovo or to the dedicated email address komerciale@kesco-energy.com
Therefore, this obligation is not only for businesses that reach these parameters, but for all businesses without exception.
If they are not brought by the specified date, then businesses should be clear that based on the ERO's decision, they will be automatically classified as businesses that meet the criteria for not being part of the regulated tariffs and must necessarily enter the open market, where they will decide for themselves from whom to be supplied with unregulated tariffs.
These conditions are not related. If a business has more than 50 employees, but has a turnover of less than 10 million, it will be part of the open market. The same is true for the opposite, so if it has less than 50 employees and a turnover of more than 10 million euros, it is still considered to meet the conditions for being part of the open market.
Based on the ERO's decision, businesses that meet at least one of the two parameters will become part of the open market from June 1, 2025.
This is the second step in market liberalization, which comes several years after the liberalization of consumers connected to the 110 kV level, which are industrial consumers. Most countries in the region have gone through this process so far. The latest is Albania, which liberalized businesses from January 1 of this year.