1) Why distribution-company disputes are different in the electricity sector Electricity is not an “ordinary” service. Turkish electricity market legislation is built around the public-interest objective of continuous, high-quality, and cost-efficient supply to consumers, under independent regulation and supervision. (epias.com.tr) That policy goal matters in court. When an electricity distribution company (“distribution company” / dağıtım […]
Introduction: land is the first “permit” in energy—yet it is rarely the simplest one Energy projects in Turkey—wind farms, solar parks, hydro plants, geothermal facilities, pipelines, substations, and transmission lines—are ultimately built on land. Even where the project company does not need full ownership, it typically needs secure, bankable land rights: ownership, easement (right of […]
1) Why “ordinary” share transfers become a regulated event in the energy sector In most industries, selling shares is primarily a corporate law exercise: you negotiate price and warranties, sign a share purchase agreement, and update the share ledger. In Turkey’s energy sector, that mindset can create immediate risk—because licensing, public interest considerations, and regulatory […]
1) Why the balancing market matters more than most contracts In every liberalized electricity market, the “real” market is the one that runs after the trading screens close—because electricity must be balanced in real time. Even if you have a perfect day-ahead schedule, your plant may trip, wind may drop, demand may spike, or a […]
1) What “unlicensed generation” really means (and what it does not mean) In Turkey, unlicensed electricity generation (often referred to as “license-exempt” generation) is a legally defined pathway that allows certain real and legal persons to generate electricity without obtaining a generation license and without establishing a company solely for that purpose, provided they meet […]
1) Why a generation license cancellation is more than a regulatory problem In Turkey, an electricity generation license is not merely an administrative permission—it is the legal backbone of a power project’s value. It anchors: When the Energy Market Regulatory Authority (EMRA/EPDK) cancels a generation license, the consequences can cascade across the entire project stack. […]
Why licensing is the “make-or-break” step in Turkish energy projects In Turkey, most commercial activity across electricity, natural gas, petroleum, LPG, and (increasingly) EV charging networks is regulated. The central authority is the Energy Market Regulatory Authority (EMRA)—known domestically as EPDK. For investors, developers, and operators, the licensing phase is not a formality. It is […]
Introduction Turkey’s electricity market has undergone a profound transformation over the last two decades. Once dominated by vertically integrated public monopolies, the sector is now largely liberalized, competitive in generation and supply, and regulated by an independent administrative authority. For domestic and foreign investors alike, understanding the Electricity Market Law in Turkey, the different license […]
For foreign athletes, coaches, and clubs operating within the Turkish sports landscape, understanding the mechanisms of sport arbitration is essential. Turkey has a unique legal infrastructure for resolving sports-related disputes, characterized by mandatory national arbitration for local issues and the overarching influence of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in Switzerland for international matters. […]