Environmentalists
seek tougher EU curbs on Balkan coal power plants
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[February 19, 2019]
By Maja Zuvela
SARAJEVO (Reuters) - Environmentalists
urged EU policy makers on Tuesday to take a tougher stance on air
pollution from coal power plants in the Western Balkans, blaming the
fumes for 3,900 deaths across Europe each year.
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The 16 Communist-era plants with 8 gigawatts (GW) capacity emitted
the same amount of sulfur dioxide in 2016 as 250 coal-fired plants
with 30 times more capacity in the rest of the European Union, five
environmentalist groups said in a report.
Lignite, the most polluting coal, is widely available in the region,
providing a cheap energy resource and the major source of energy for
Kosovo, Serbia, Bosnia, Macedonia and Montenegro.
The countries are members of the Energy Community, which had a
commitment to implement EU rules to curb pollution by 2018. But
investments in new power plants or technology to cut emissions have
largely been delayed, the report said.
"Air pollution knows no borders and is still an invisible killer in
Europe," said Vlatka Matkovic Puljic, senior health and energy
officer at HEAL and the report's lead author.
"It is high time that EU policy-makers step up efforts to clean up
the air and decarbonise the power sector," she said.
The report said the West Balkan power plants caused pollution across
the EU and beyond that caused healthcare costs of up to 11.5 billion
euros ($13.02 billion) a year.
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The region plans to add 2.7 GW of new coal plant capacity in the
next decade, mainly financed by Chinese banks, the report said,
adding that most plants would not meet the EU's pollution control
rules.
Governments in the region say they need to expand coal power
generation to meet rising demand and ensure energy security and say
that new coal plants would emit less greenhouse gases.
The report called for stricter rules to be imposed on the Energy
Community and said the European Commission should make meeting those
regulations a requirement for joining the EU.
For now, the countries in the Energy Community do not face any
penalties if targets are not met.
"Rather than investing in yet more outdated coal power plants,
Western Balkan leaders need to ... increase the share of sustainable
forms of renewable energy," said Ioana Ciuta, Energy Coordinator at
CEE Bankwatch, one of the five groups behind the report.
(Reporting by Maja Zuvela; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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