Czech Republic To Extend Coal Mining Amid High Demand
01 Jul 2022
Prague, Jun 30 (AP) The
Czech Republic has decided to reverse plans to halt mining in a key black coal
region to help the country safeguard its power supply amid high demand and the
energy crunch prompted by the Russia's war in Ukraine.
Finance
Minister Zbynek Stanjura said on Thursday that the state-owned OKD company will
extend its mining activities in north-eastern Czech Republic until at least the
end of next year, with an analysis to be made on a possible further extension
until 2025.
The original
plans called for mining to be halted there this year, but “demand for black
coal is enormous”, Stanjura said.
Some other
European Union countries are turning back to coal as a replacement for reduced
deliveries of Russian natural gas, threatening climate goals in Europe.
Russia has
trimmed gas flows to EU countries like Germany, Italy and Austria on top of its
gas cutoffs to France, Poland, Bulgaria and others.
OKD's chief
executive, Roman Sikora, said the Czech company was planning to mine 1.3
million metric tons of black coal in 2023.
It will be
mostly used for generating power and household heating. Coal-fired power plants
generate almost 50 per cent of total Czech electricity output.
The decision
came after the European Union agreed to ban Russian coal starting in August
over the war in Ukraine and as it works to reduce the bloc's energy ties to
Russia.
The Czech
government aims to phase out coal in energy production by 2033 while increasing
the country's reliance on nuclear power. (AP) PY PY