> The missing energy amounts currently to 113 GWh. The question of who will compensate for this loss has to be answered.
This seems to be the primary issue, not the minor drift in cheap clocks.
Also, the press release says nothing about "energy war" so that kind of hyperbole does not add anything of value.
What is going on here is akin to someone tampering with their electrical meter, except done by a state electrical company, so on a somewhat grander scale.
1 GWh = 1,000,000 KWh and in Serbia/Kosovo the price is around €0.07/KWh so the retail amount of this theft is around €8 million. It is significant enough to make an issue of it, but not really a big deal.
This seems to be the primary issue, not the minor drift in cheap clocks.
Also, the press release says nothing about "energy war" so that kind of hyperbole does not add anything of value.
What is going on here is akin to someone tampering with their electrical meter, except done by a state electrical company, so on a somewhat grander scale.
1 GWh = 1,000,000 KWh and in Serbia/Kosovo the price is around €0.07/KWh so the retail amount of this theft is around €8 million. It is significant enough to make an issue of it, but not really a big deal.
http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/...