Across Europe, the green hydrogen transition is no longer a distant concept but a clear strategic pathway for decarbonising energy systems, heavy industry and transport. Germany’s energy transition strategy explicitly recognises that long-term climate neutrality will rely on imported renewable hydrogen and its derivatives. The European Union has already built a regulatory and policy architecture that defines hydrogen as a new energy vector, integrates it into long-term industrial, energy and climate planning, and creates mechanisms to support production, trade, certification and infrastructure development. In this emerging continental map of hydrogen supply and demand, Serbia is not a peripheral spectator. Instead, it holds a credible opportunity to become a meaningful regional centre for hydrogen production, transit and export—if it can align its legal, regulatory and market frameworks quickly enough.
Serbia’s potential is structural, not hypothetical. The country has a growing base of renewable energy potential, particularly in solar and wind, and an already developed transmission system that can support future electrification and large-scale integration of new generation assets. Its natural gas system and strategic geographic position between EU energy corridors and the Western Balkans naturally position it as a logistical and infrastructural bridge. Industry is still a powerful pillar of the economy, which means that domestic hydrogen demand could realistically emerge from refineries, chemicals, fertilisers, metallurgy and transport sectors once competitive and reliable supply chains are established. Foreign companies, especially German and broader EU investors already present in Serbia, represent both potential consumers and strategic partners for hydrogen development. Unlike many regional peers, Serbia is not entering this conversation from zero; it is entering it with infrastructure, geography, industry and established European economic integration already on its side.
Yet potential is not enough in a highly regulated and capital-intensive sector like hydrogen. Serbia has taken important conceptual steps at the strategic level, notably through the adoption of the Strategy for Energy Development of the Republic of Serbia to 2040 with projections to 2050. This document recognises hydrogen as part of Serbia’s long-term decarbonisation pathway, and acknowledges the need for new energy carriers and innovative technologies to guarantee security of supply and sustainability. A draft National Hydrogen Strategy has also been prepared with participation from academia, business and international partners. On paper, these are encouraging developments because they show institutional awareness that hydrogen is not a luxury topic but an inevitable component of modern energy policy. However, Serbia remains stuck in a transitional phase between recognising hydrogen’s importance and actually turning it into a regulated, bankable, investable and operational market.
Today, hydrogen projects in Serbia do not operate under a dedicated, coherent legal and regulatory regime. Instead, they are forced to navigate a fragmented mosaic of general legislation: the Energy Law, the Law on the Use of Renewable Energy Sources, environmental protection regulations, construction and permitting frameworks, and international transport conventions. Nowhere in this system does hydrogen exist as a clearly defined independent energy carrier with its own rules, obligations, market structure, certification or transport framework. There is no dedicated action plan for hydrogen, no implementation roadmap, and no legal certainty for investors with regard to procedures, responsibilities, timelines or compliance conditions. As a result, hydrogen remains recognised strategically but not operationally. It is acknowledged in planning, but not yet enabled in practice.
This regulatory vacuum has very practical consequences. Investors face complex, unclear and overlapping permitting procedures that involve multiple institutions whose responsibilities intersect without being cleanly defined. Bankability becomes a problem because major financial institutions require legal clarity, long-term predictability, and concrete market and certification rules before supporting capital-intensive projects. Without a clearly defined regulatory framework aligned with European law, Serbia cannot fully integrate its hydrogen market into the EU system. That prevents participation in European trade mechanisms, undermines credibility in certification, and restricts long-term off-take agreements that are essential to financing hydrogen production. In such an environment, progress is limited to pilot initiatives, feasibility studies and conceptual strategies rather than real, large-scale deployment.
From this perspective, several critical gaps emerge as decisive barriers. Serbia still has no legal definition of hydrogen, and particularly no definition of “green hydrogen,” aligned with EU renewable legislation. Without such a definition, hydrogen cannot be treated as an independent pillar of energy policy. There is no structured hydrogen market framework covering production rules, infrastructure access, sales mechanisms, competition principles and participation requirements. Technical standards for blending hydrogen into gas networks do not exist, which blocks even hybrid or transitional solutions. Serbia does not have a certification and guarantees-of-origin system compatible with EU standards. That means hydrogen produced in Serbia cannot be easily or automatically recognised as compliant within the European market, significantly limiting export potential. There is also no legal basis for cross-border hydrogen transport and trade and no defined regime for international cooperation in hydrogen infrastructure. Finally, Serbia lacks structured support mechanisms that would stabilise investor expectations, provide predictability of returns, and align hydrogen financing tools with EU state aid frameworks.
However, these gaps are not a reason for pessimism—they simply define the reform agenda. If Serbia wishes to move from potential to reality, the first foundational step must be the legal recognition of hydrogen as a distinct energy carrier, fully harmonised with EU legislation. This requires legally binding definitions, positioning hydrogen clearly in the Energy Law and renewable energy law, and clearly determining the rights and obligations of all market participants. The next critical step is the formal adoption of a National Hydrogen Strategy, not as an aspirational text but as a binding development platform with measurable goals, deadlines, responsible institutions and a structured implementation map. Hydrogen is capital-intensive, time-sensitive and highly technology-dependent; without formal commitment, investment confidence cannot exist.
Regulation of market functioning and infrastructure access must follow. Serbia needs clear rules governing access to hydrogen infrastructure, including pipelines, storage, transport and distribution. It must define technical standards for hydrogen transport and storage and create transparent, non-discriminatory access conditions. Blending hydrogen into the gas network, where technically feasible, must be governed by EU-aligned standards to ensure safety, interoperability and market acceptance. Certification is another pillar that cannot be delayed. Without guarantees of origin harmonised with European frameworks, Serbian hydrogen will not be competitive, regardless of how cheap or abundant it becomes. Certification determines credibility, market access and price premium. For a country positioning itself as a future exporter, this is not a technical detail but a strategic prerequisite.
Cross-border cooperation and export capacity must also be codified. Serbia needs to define legal provisions enabling hydrogen export, develop bilateral and regional mechanisms of cooperation, and ensure a stable legal environment for infrastructure projects that cross national borders. Hydrogen is not a purely domestic topic; it is intrinsically international. Its value lies precisely in its ability to connect energy systems, markets and industries across states. Without formalised legal interoperability with EU rules, Serbia risks building hydrogen capacity that remains commercially isolated.
Finally, no hydrogen economy can emerge without investment-support mechanisms. Serbia must ensure long-term renewable electricity supply for electrolysers, create predictable market-based or policy-based support frameworks aligned with EU state aid principles, and provide regulatory clarity regarding grid fees, compensation systems and cost structures applied to hydrogen production. Investors need clarity, not promises. They need to see a transparent rulebook that ensures economic viability, financial sustainability and manageable risk.
If these reforms are enacted decisively and without delay, Serbia can justifiably position itself as a regional green hydrogen hub rather than a passive policy follower. It can supply domestic industrial demand, reducing dependence on fossil fuels and strengthening industrial competitiveness. It can export hydrogen and hydrogen derivatives to European Union markets hungry for reliable decarbonised energy inputs. It can serve as a strategic bridge, connecting Western Balkan energy ecosystems with the European hydrogen economy, while reinforcing political, economic and technological ties with Germany and other EU partner states. Such positioning would not only strengthen Serbia’s energy security but also attract high-quality foreign direct investment and deepen economic integration with Europe at a moment when industrial transformation is rewriting the continent’s future.
The message is therefore clear: Serbia is well-positioned geographically, infrastructurally and strategically to participate meaningfully in the hydrogen era. What it lacks is not potential, technical capability or international relevance, but regulatory maturity and legal certainty. The moment requires coordinated, timely and EU-aligned regulation that converts strategic recognition into binding framework, clear rules and credible market conditions. By doing so, Serbia can move beyond pilot thinking and place itself firmly on the emerging hydrogen map of Europe—not as a marginal observer, but as a recognised, reliable and competitive regional centre for production, transport and export of green hydrogen.

