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Home > Archives for Coal in the Balkans

Coal in the Balkans

Croatia coal plant vote unlikely to derail project

April 6, 2015

SIGNIFICANCE: Croatia, like several countries in the region, is upgrading coal-fired power plants to boost electricity security. This has encountered opposition from environmental groups and local people. IMPACTS SOCIAL: Environmental concerns about coal power and other energy projects are real, but have partly gained momentum due to broader political issues. POLITICAL: The government wants to push ahead with energy projects, but faces rising opposition as a closely-fought election nears.


Exhibition brings coal-affected communities in Colombia and Croatia a step closer together

March 24, 2015

A photo exhibition in Croatia is connecting the dots between communities in Colombia and the Istrian coast that are negatively affected by coal.


[Campaign update] 92 percent of public consultation respondents against Plomin C coal power plant

March 24, 2015

Almost all respondants to a consultation on the Plomin power plant do not want a new unit running on coal.


Western Balkans electricity plans: where will all that power go?

March 23, 2015

Western Balkan countries have ambitious plans to increase their electricity generation over the next years. But what will happen if they all become a regional energy hub? Will there be a demand for all the available electricity?


Electricity export ambitions may prove risky for Western Balkans, shows new study

March 19, 2015

The Western Balkans countries have strong electricity export ambitions that create the danger of stranded assets, finds a new report launched by CEE Bankwatch Network today. If governments take electricity expansion decisions without taking due account of developments in other countries, the region will have to compete with other nearby exporters and may find that its power plants become uneconomic.


By the numbers: where will energy come from in the western Balkans?

March 19, 2015

Today we’ve published a new report analysing future energy trends in countries of the western Balkans. From a robust dataset we researched together with the University of Groningen and the consultancy ‘The Advisory House’, we’ve pulled out a couple of illustrations.


Stranded assets in the Western Balkans – report on the long-term economic viability of new export capacities

March 19, 2015

Country chapters available for Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia. For other languages, see here. Analysing the estimated energy demand and production capacities in Western Balkan countries, this study shows that if countries realise their planned capacity expansions, the region will have a 56 per cent electricity surplus in 2024, led by Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia. Nearly all governments in the region aspire to become electricity exporters, but the study argues that if governments fail to take into account the regional perspective, they could end up with power plants becoming simply uneconomic to operate.


Energy Community countries so rich they can afford to eschew climate action?

March 11, 2015

Planned new coal capacities will result in high additional costs for Energy Community countries. Transforming their energy sectors into efficient, sustainable renewables-based systems is not only possible but a cost-effective way forward.


NGOs demand transparency in negotiations over Plomin C coal project in Croatia

March 5, 2015

Croatian electricity company HEP on Monday announced that it had signed an exclusivity agreement to conduct further negotiations with Japan’s Marubeni – a company which has been implicated in several corruption scandals.


Guest post: Pljevlja shareholder A2A must resist pressure to build new lignite unit in Montenegro

February 11, 2015

Montenegro’s government is pushing hard for the construction of a new unit at the Pljevlja lignite-fired power plant. NGOs are encouraging the major shareholder company to not give in to this pressure, writes Jelena Marojević Galić from Green Home.


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