Albania, Serbia and North Macedonia will Ask the EU for Help to Survive the Winter

Serbia, Albania and North Macedonia have decided to help each other with energy and food shortages in winter and to ask for help from the EU. This happened at a meeting of the "Open Balkans" regional initiative on Friday in Belgrade.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and the Prime Ministers of Albania and North Macedonia, Edi Rama and Dimitar Kovacevski, agreed to form an overseeing body to help the three governments share surplus energy and food.

"Everything of ours will be available to North Macedonia and Albania and vice versa," Vucic said at a press conference.

Serbia is almost entirely dependent on Russian gas imports and generates about 70% of its electricity needs in its aging coal-fired power plants, Reuters reports.

North Macedonia relies on fossil fuels and hydroelectric power and is also dependent on imported electricity. Albania produces most of its electricity in hydropower.

Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama said the three candidate countries for EU membership would ask the EU to help them survive the winter.

"The best scenario for Albania would be half a billion euros (additional costs) for... uninterrupted electricity supplies," Rama said.

He added that the EU should not repeat "the shameful behavior of the (COVID-19) pandemic when the countries of the Western Balkans had to turn to China, Russia and Turkey".

The EU allocated 70 million euros for anti-epidemic measures and vaccines for the six countries of the Western Balkans, and the member states, including Bulgaria, gave them their vaccines against the coronavirus infection.

The Turkish and Hungarian foreign ministers also participated in the meeting as guests. After the meeting, Hungary's first diplomat...

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