Another case of alleged corruption in a CEE energy company
September 17, 2012 | Read more
Alleged corruption at Poland’s second biggest state-owned energy company ENEA S.A. may compromise yet another project financed by European public banks.
The putting on hold (for now) of another waste incinerator project confirms a negative assessment of the Czech Republic’s performance in waste management. And still, the Czech government fails to grasp that the only properly sustainable way forward is investment in recycling and waste reduction.
A recent audit showed that Ukraine lacks good management at least as much as finances to reform its energy sector. EU money is meanwhile siding with a tainted company.
The devil in the details: Europe’s low-carbon economy dream
August 17, 2012 | Read more
The increasing popularity of a ‘low-carbon economy’ rhetoric calls for robust assessments of the carbon intensity of EU funded projects. Otherwise the potential that lies in the concept may get diluted by conflicting interests.
Europe’s anti-crisis measures include efforts to increase private investments in public infrastructure. Yet, a backlash against public-private partnerships in Portugal is a warning against putting too much faith in this approach.
Spot the difference: Alstom in Indonesia and Slovenia
July 31, 2012 | Read more
The company hired to build a new unit at the Sostanj lignite power plant is involved in strikingly similar corruption cases across continents.






