07 June 2021

Chemnitz-Nord lignite plant to close six years earlier than planned

BERLIN, 7 June 2021 – Germany’s Chemnitz-Nord lignite power plant will shut six years earlier than previously planned. Operator Eins Energie für Sachsen has decided to bring forward the closure of the plant’s last lignite unit to 2023 due to prohibitively high carbon permit prices. The plant is currently in the process of being converted to burn fossil gas.

Chemnitz lignite plant is closing six years earlier than planned because the operator has finally woken up to the fact that lignite is a financial liability. It’s time the German government concluded the same. There’s no justification for handing billions of euros in public money to lignite operators for their negligent business planning,” said Wiebke Witt, campaigner in Germany at Europe Beyond Coal. “Unfortunately, the operator has opted to pump more cash into would-be stranded assets: this time in the form of fossil gas. It’s a real missed opportunity for the city of Chemnitz, which would be perfectly placed to benefit from a renewables-based, future-proof heating solution.”

The decision to hasten the closure of the plant’s lignite units on financial grounds comes as the European Commission assesses whether the German government’s plan to compensate owners of lignite-fired power plants to the tune of 4.35 billion euros is in line with EU State aid rules [1]. The case is seen as a test of the European Commission’s determination to align its competition rules with the European Green Deal.

Germany is the only country in Europe to legislate a coal exit plan [2] that is incompatible with the UN Paris climate agreement, since it is supposed to be completed in 2038 [3]. However, the German government is likely to be forced to bring it forward after the country’s supreme constitutional court ruled that the government’s climate protection measures are insufficient, and must be strengthened in order to account for intergenerational climate justice [4].

 

Contacts:

Wiebke Witt, campaigner in Germany, Europe Beyond Coal (English) (German)
wiebke@beyond-coal.eu, +49 176 64977897

Alastair Clewer, Communications Officer, Europe Beyond Coal (English)
alastair@beyond-coal.eu, +49 176 433 07 185

 

Notes:

  1. https://www.neweurope.eu/article/eu-probes-compensation-for-early-closure-of-lignite-fired-power-plants-in-germany/
  2. https://www.bundesrat.de/SharedDocs/drucksachen/2020/0301-0400/392-20.pdf?__blob=publicationFile&v=1
  3. Why Europe must phase-out coal by 2030 to respect the UN Paris climate agreement: https://climateanalytics.org/briefings/coal-phase-out/
  4. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/29/historic-german-ruling-says-climate-goals-not-tough-enough

 

About:

Europe Beyond Coal is an alliance of civil society groups working to catalyse the closures of coal mines and power plants, prevent the building of any new coal projects and hasten the just transition to clean, renewable energy and energy efficiency. Our groups are devoting their time, energy and resources to this independent campaign to make Europe coal free by 2030 or sooner. www.beyond-coal.eu

Read also
BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

19 June 2023

Reducing gas and coal by a third is possible by 2025 and gaining independence from both can happen by 2035.

BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

27 April 2023

This briefing analyses the way that seven European countries (Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Poland and Romania) responded to […]

BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

05 April 2023

5 April 2023 – While Europe needs to decarbonize electricity production by 2035 to limit warming to 1.5°C, a new report finds that banks and investors have provided billions of dollars in support to the gas power industry since 2019 [1]. The report’s authors, including Reclaim Finance and Beyond Fossil Fuels, call on financial institutions to restrict support for gas power in Europe to avoid locking-in carbon emissions on a huge scale, and increasing the level of stranded assets by 2035.

BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

29 March 2023

Just as we expect every last one of the 157 coal plants remaining in Europe will end up with pre-2030 closure dates in the coming years, we also expect that by 2035 our power sector will be based completely on renewable energy instead of fossils. That is what we will campaign for: going Beyond Fossil Fuels.