Bulgaria’s 2053 energy strategy: coal until 2030, new nuclear capacities
19 Jan 2023
Bulgaria intends to burn coal until 2030 to ensure energy
security amid the ongoing crisis, while at the same time developing nuclear,
solar, wind, hydropower, battery storage, and hydrogen projects, according to a
proposed energy strategy until 2053.
Apart from the energy crisis on a global and regional scale, the
reasons for such a move include the state of the economy and the war in
Ukraine, according to Rosen Hristov, the energy minister in the country’s
caretaker government.
The 30-year strategic document
may help the country renegotiate the National Recovery and
Resilience Plan (NRRP) with the European Commission, said
Delyan Dobrev, chairman of the parliamentary committee on energy.
However, even if the negotiations fail and Bulgaria loses some of
the EU funding earmarked for its NRRP, the country will not shut down its coal
power plants as their economic benefits are larger than the potential losses,
according to Hristov.
In the nuclear power sector, the strategy envisages building 2 GW
of new capacity at the site of the Belene N plant by 2035-2040 and 2 GW of
replacement capacity at the Kozloduy nuclear plant by 2045, local media
reported.
The strategy envisages
building 4 GW of nuclear capacity, 12 GW of solar, and 4 GW of wind
The document also projects adding 7 GW of solar and 2 GW of wind
power plants by 2030, and 12 GW of solar and 4 GW of wind farms by 2050. In the
field of energy storage, the strategy provides for expanding the Chaira
pumped-storage power plant by 2030, building 1 GW of new pumped-storage
facilities by 2035, and introducing 600 MW of battery storage by 2030 and 1.5
GW of seasonal storage systems by 2050.
Bulgaria also plans to roll
out 600 MW of battery storage by 2030
The country also plans to develop a total of 870 MW of new
hydropower projects by 2030 and 1.27 GW by 2050. In geothermal energy, the
focus is on improving local district heating systems.
1.27 GW of new hydropower
plants are expected to be built by 2050, along with 5 GW of hydrogen
electrolyzers
In the hydrogen segment, the document envisages the construction
of 1 GW of electrolyzers by 2030 and 5 GW of electrolyzers by 2050 for domestic
consumption and export.
The 30-year plan also includes upgrading existing power
transmission lines, building new ones, digitalizing the distribution network,
and installing 1,000 charging stations for electric vehicles by 2030. The
document also includes measures to tackle energy poverty and improve energy
efficiency in households.