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Home > Teams > Pippa Gallop

Pippa Gallop

Pippa Gallop

Southeast Europe Energy Policy Officer

Email: pippa.gallop AT bankwatch.org
Tel.: +385 99 755 97 87

Pippa works as Bankwatch Southeast Europe energy advisor, with a specialisation in coal and hydropower in the Western Balkans. She is based in Zagreb, Croatia and speaks English, Croatian and rusty German.

More from Pippa Gallop

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Victory for civil society as EBRD cancels loan for controversial Croatian dam

May 28, 2013 | Read more

Today we’re relieved in Zagreb as one energy project that could have had a destructive impact on Croatia’s future has lost its financing and thus its chances of going ahead are drastically reduced: I’m speaking about the infamous Ombla dam, a project for an underground hydropower plant that would have practically destroyed a protected area close to Dubrovnik.

Ombla-withdraw.jpg

[Campaign update] EBRD still not withdrawing from damaging Ombla hydropower project, NGOs call on bank to heed new evidence

May 13, 2013 | Read more

Despite having a slew of good reasons not to support the damaging Ombla hydropower plan in Croatia, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development still didn’t confirm during recent meetings that it would withdraw from the project.

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Small shareholders protest price cap on lignite from Šoštanj’s mine

February 6, 2013 | Read more

With the dubious economics of the Šoštanj 6 lignite power plant depending partly on keeping the price of lignite low, small shareholders who would have to forego their profits are not thrilled at the prospect.

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Good news: EBRD drops controversial Monsanto project

January 28, 2013 | Read more

A potential cooperation between the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the agro-corporation Monsanto has thankfully not come to fruition. The case highlights the difficulties for a large development bank to reach farmers on the ground.

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Financial alchemy in Slovenia’s energy sector still results in lignite, not gold

December 11, 2012 | Read more

Even with the latest investment plan for unit 6 at the Sostanj lignite power plant (TES 6), the project’s economics are (surprise, surprise) still distinctly shaky as an independent analysis shows. Nonetheless, the project looks ever more likely to get a state guarantee from the Slovene government.

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