12 May 2022

Slovakia presses ahead with coal phase out as solution to energy crisis

Bratislava, 12 May 2022 – Slovakia has confirmed that the country’s 266MW Novácky coal power plant will close as planned at the end of 2023, demonstrating that European countries can proceed with their coal phase out plans and reduce their dependence on Russian fossil fuels at the same time. 

The Novácky coal plant is the country’s second largest carbon emitter, producing 1.16 million tonnes of CO2 in 2021 [1], and some of the most expensive electricity in Europe [2]. The government announced in 2018 that it would end all subsidies for coal mines by the beginning of 2023, signalling the end for the two mines that feed Novácky, and the plant itself. Plans are already being made to supplement the retired capacity with 80MW of solar, which will be built on the soon-to-be retired coal sites. 

Slovakia is right to stick to its coal phase out plan because ending financial flows for Russian aggression, tackling the energy price crisis, and halting climate change require the same solution: stop burning fossil fuels,” said Kathrin Gutmann, campaign director at Europe Beyond Coal. “Slovakia’s decision to convert disused coal sites into solar farms is a smart one. These large open spaces possess much of the infrastructure required to host solar installations, and combined with advanced energy storage technologies, can consistently deliver a base load of low cost, sustainable fossil-free energy. Governments across Europe should look at how cheap and straightforward these conversions are and incorporate them into their own crisis response strategies.” 

In another sign that coal’s structural decline remains firmly locked-in, the Bulgarian Minister of Environment last month announced that operations at the country’s 71 year-old, 120 MW lignite-fired Maritsa III power plant would be suspended following sustained violations of air quality standards [3]. The plant’s operator is appealing the decision.  

ENDS

Contacts

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

Michael Buchsbaum, Communications Officer, Europe Beyond Coal
michael@beyond-coal.eu, +49 176 8106 8005 (English, German)

Kathrin Gutmann, Campaign Director, Europe Beyond Coal,
kathrin@beyond-coal.eu, +49 1577 8363 036

Notes

  1. https://ec.europa.eu/clima/eu-action/eu-emissions-trading-system-eu-ets/union-registry_en#tab-0-1
  2. Slovakia’s Novácky coal power plant produces some of the most expensive electricity in Europe: https://e.dennikn.sk/2801305/dostat-sem-jadrove-palivo-z-ruska-bolo-ako-vystupit-na-mount-everest-v-plavkach-hovori-riaditel-slovenskych-elektrarni/ 
  3. https://www.energetika.net/eu/novice/bulgaria/bulgarian-maritsa-3-coal-plant-forced-to-halt-operations
  4. View our European Coal Plant Countdown: https://beyond-coal.eu/

About
Europe Beyond Coal is an alliance of civil society groups working to ensure a just transition to a fossil-free, fully renewables-based European energy sector. This means exiting coal entirely by 2030 at the latest, and fossil gas by 2035 in the power sector. We devote our time and resources to this independent campaign because we are committed to seeing a European energy system that protects people, nature and our global climate: 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.