1) Why “energy storage licensing” in Turkey is not a single license In Turkey, energy storage is regulated as a set of legally distinct models, each with different permissions, grid-connection rules, settlement treatment, and compliance risks. The phrase “energy storage license” is often used in the market, but in practice you will usually fall into […]
1) Why carbon pricing has become a legal risk—not a sustainability slogan Carbon has turned into a regulated cost. For heavy industry, power generation, and carbon-intensive supply chains, carbon pricing is no longer limited to voluntary commitments. It is increasingly shaped by public-law obligations, market-based compliance tools, and cross-border trade measures. Two developments make Turkey’s […]
Introduction: offshore wind in Turkey is moving from “potential” to “process” Turkey has been positioning offshore wind as a long-term pillar of its energy transition, and international institutions have started to map out pathways for scaling the sector. The World Bank and partners have publicly referenced a national ambition of 5 GW of offshore wind […]
Introduction: why YEKDEM still matters for bankable renewables In Turkey, the Renewable Energy Resources Support Mechanism—widely known as YEKDEM—has been one of the most influential policy tools shaping the economics and financeability of renewable power plants. Whether your project is solar (GES), wind (RES), hydro, geothermal, or biomass, YEKDEM can determine: YEKDEM is often described […]
1) Why the legal process is the project in Türkiye Turkey’s solar (GES) and wind (RES) markets attract developers, infrastructure funds, strategic investors, and corporate offtakers because the resource potential is strong and the market is structured around a regulated—but investable—framework. At the same time, a renewable project in Turkey is not “one permit + […]
1) Why energy contracts break under “extraordinary events” faster than other sectors Energy projects and energy trading arrangements are unusually sensitive to disruptions. A single event can simultaneously affect permitting, construction, grid connection, fuel supply, dispatch, cash flow, and financing covenants. Unlike many industries where deliveries can be postponed with limited consequence, energy projects often […]
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 […]
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 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. […]