Banovici lignite power plant, Bosnia and Herzegovina
The 350 MW Banovići coal power plant project was planned alongside the existing Banovići mine just a few kilometres away from Tuzla by the predominantly state-owned RMU Banovići (Banovići Brown Coal Mines).
Stay informed
We closely follow international public finance and bring critical updates from the ground.
Background
The 350 MW Banovići coal power plant project was planned alongside the existing Banovići mine just a few kilometres away from Tuzla by the predominantly state-owned RMU Banovići (Banovići Brown Coal Mines). In 2015, a construction contract was signed with China’s Dongfang, the same company which built the Stanari plant. As of early 2024 it seems highly unlikely that the plant will go ahead, but it has not been officially cancelled.
Mystery economics
The project’s economics have been kept under wraps and no feasibility study is publicly available.
Financing was sought from the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), but was never signed. The project is supposed to cost EUR 405 million. It also appears that a guarantee by the Federation of BiH government would be required, raising questions about compliance with State aid rules under the Energy Community Treaty.
'Hostages of coal'
An AlJazeera report on the situation of people affected by the coal infrastructure in Tuzla and Banovici.
Local language only.
Legal violations
The environmental permit for the Banovići power plant was renewed in early 2016, but failed to cover numerous issues and prescribe precise mitigation measures. NGO Ekotim therefore filed a court case seeking to annul the permit in April 2016. The court case was rejected in late 2019 on the spurious grounds that a Sarajevo-based NGO cannot complain about a project sited near Tuzla – a verdict that was appealed at the Federal Supreme Court, as well as being subject to a complaint to the Aarhus Convention. Before the court ruled on the case, the permit expired in early 2021, and does not appear to have been renewed.
No transboundary consultation was carried out for the plant’s environmental assessment, even though this is required under the Espoo Convention. After a complaint was made to the Convention’s Implementation Committee, Bosnia and Herzegovina pledged to carry out transboundary consultations for any renewal of the plant’s environmental permit.
Scarce water resources
In order to obtain water for the Banovići plant, the small existing Ramići lake would be expanded into a larger reservoir. However it is not clear that the runoff from the surrounding hills could provide enough water. Another issue is the structural soundness of the earth dam which is planned to hold back the water at Ramići.
Initial proposals included using water from the Turija river to fill the reservoir during dry periods, however this would then deprive Modrac, and thus the Tuzla power plant and the people of Tuzla, of a significant source of water. More recent proposals have focused on taking water from Lake Breštica which is located in the Spreča river basin, but this would have the same result. The issue remains unsolved. For this reason Ekotim filed a court complaint against the environmental permit for the reservoir in April 2016, which was also rejected in late 2019 and was appealed to the Federal Supreme Court.
In September 2019 it was reported that RMU Banovići had failed to obtain a water consent for the Ramići reservoir from the Tuzla cantonal authorities, as it had tried to extend the validity of a previous one which had already expired.
Construction permit refused
The project has received on-and-off high level support from the Federal authorities in Bosnia-Herzegovina. However in December 2017, it was announced that the project had been refused a preliminary construction permit due to unresolved issues around water consumption, coal supply, flue gases, ash disposal and other issues.
Latest news
Overblown job promises in southeast Europe’s coal sector show the need for a just transition – report
Press release | 14 November, 2016Promises for new jobs in south-east Europe’s coal sector are exaggerated, a new Bankwatch report reveals. Hardly any coal operations across the region are economically viable, and as a result many coal workers, especially in the mines, are set to lose their jobs, even if the plans for countless new power plants materialise. Governments, coal workers and their wider communities need to work together towards a just transition.
Read moreLawsuits and complaints pile up against planned Bosnia and Herzegovina coal power plants
Press release | 17 October, 2016Sarajevo-based environmental watchdog Ekotim has submitted on Friday (October 14) an official complaint to the Energy Community dispute settlement mechanism (1) due to lax pollution limits for a new Chinese-backed 450 MW unit at the Tuzla coal power plant in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Read moreGuest post: China stokes global coal growth
Blog entry | 27 September, 2016China cuts coal at home but state owned companies and banks drive new coal expansion overseas, despite top level promises of green growth for developing countries, writes Beth Walker from China Dialogue.
Read moreRelated publications
Comply or Close 2024: six years of deadly legal breaches by Western Balkan coal plants
Report | 17 September, 2024 | Download PDFThe end of 2023 marked six years since the deadline passed for power plants in the Western Balkans to meet new air pollution standards. Yet the deadly air pollution from the region’s mostly antiquated coal power plants has hardly decreased at all since 2018.
Western Balkan coal power plants polluted twice as much as those in the EU in 2019
Briefing | 12 July, 2021 | Download PDFThe non-compliance of Western Balkan coal power plants with the emission limits enshrined in the Energy Community Treaty is reflected in the region’s high sulphur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen oxides (NOX) and dust emissions. This briefing looks mainly at th
The great coal jobs fraud (2018 UPDATE)
Study | 28 June, 2018 |This study, an update of our November 2016 analysis, examines the claims and finds that in almost all cases, they are exaggerated. In fact, even the current levels of employment cannot be maintained and some companies such as Elektroprivreda Srbije and