Dutch join Germany, Austria, in reverting to coal
21 Jun 2022
The Dutch joined Germany and Austria
in reverting to coal power on Monday following an energy crisis provoked by
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The Netherlands said it would lift all restrictions on power stations
fired by the fossil fuel, which were previously limited to just over a third of
output.
Berlin and Vienna made similar announcements on Sunday as Moscow, facing
biting sanctions over Ukraine, cuts gas supplies to energy-starved Europe.
“The cabinet has decided to immediately withdraw the restriction on
production for coal-fired power stations from 2002 to 2024,” Dutch climate and
energy minister Rob Jetten told journalists in The Hague.
The Dutch minister said his country had “prepared this decision with our
European colleagues over the past few days”.
Germany however said it still aimed to close its coal power plants by
2030, in light of the greater emissions of climate-changing CO2 from the fossil
fuel.
“The 2030 coal exit date is not in doubt at all,” economy ministry
spokesman Stephan Gabriel Haufe said at a regular news conference.
The target was “more important than ever”, he added.
– ‘More countries being squeezed’ –
Russia’s invasion of its pro-Western neighbour has sent global prices
for energy soaring and raised the prospect of shortages if supplies were to be
cut off.
Russian energy giant Gazprom has already stopped deliveries to a number
of European countries, including Poland, Bulgaria, Finland and the Netherlands.
Germany’s reliance on Russian energy imports has made it particularly
vulnerable as Moscow looks for leverage against the West.
The Dutch are less reliant, depending on Russia for around 15 percent of
their gas supplies compared to the EU average of 40 percent. But they are still
concerned.
“I want to emphasise that at the moment there’s no acute gas shortage,”
Dutch minister Jetten said. “However, more countries are now being squeezed (by
Russia). That worries us.”
The Dutch government said it was also making an “urgent appeal” to
companies and business to save as much energy as possible ahead of the winter.
Germany’s decision to power up its coal power plants came after Gazprom
cut deliveries to Germany via the Nord Stream gas pipeline last week.
The move, presented by Gazprom as a technical issue, has been criticised
as “political” by Berlin.
German Economy Minister Robert Habeck, a Green party politician,
described the decision to revert to coal as “bitter, but indispensable for
reducing gas consumption”.
– ‘Unexpected situation’ –
Austria’s government meanwhile announced Sunday that it would reopen a
mothballed coal power station because of power shortages arising from reduced
deliveries of gas from Russia.
The authorities would work with the Verbund group, the country’s main
electricity supplier, to get the station in the southern city of Mellach back
in action, said the Chancellery.
The European Commission noted Monday that “some of the existing coal capacities
might be used longer than initially expected” because of the new energy
landscape in Europe.
“We know that the energy mix and the plans of member states will adjust
slightly because we are in an unexpected situation,” Commission spokesman Tim
McPhie said at a press briefing.
Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has managed to reduce the share of
its natural gas supplied by Russia from 55 percent before the invasion to 35
percent.
The government has also mandated the filling of gas reserves to 90 percent
ahead of the European winter at the end of the year, to hedge against a further
reduction in supply.
Germany’s government, a coalition between the Social Democrats, Liberals
and Greens, aims “ideally” to close all coal power plants by 2030.
Their agreement, reached at the end of last year, brought forward the
previous government’s aim to shut the plants by 2038.