APMDC Suliyari coal upcoming auction 1,50,000 MT for MP MSME on 2nd Dec 2024 @ SBP INR 2516/- per MT

APMDC Suliyari coal upcoming auction 75,000 MT for Pan India Open on 15th Oct 2024 / 15th Nov 2024 & 16th Dec 2024 @ SBP INR 3000/- per MT

Notice regarding Bidder Demo dated 23.10.2024 from 4 P.M of BCCL Coking Coal of Washery Developer and Operator (WDO) for Dugda Coal Washery e-Auction scheduled on 16.12.2024 in Coaljunction portal

Login Register Contact Us
Welcome to Linkage e-Auctions Welcome to Coal Trading Portal Welcome to APMDC Suliyari Coal

Coal news and updates

Limited increase in coal power in Europe: Experts

13 Jul 2022

London, July 13 (IANS) Plans in Europe to place a small number of coal plants on temporary standby would add 1.3 per cent to EU emissions annually, even in the worst-case scenario where they run at the highest levels, energy think tank Ember said on Wednesday.

Germany, Austria, France and the Netherlands have recently announced plans to enable increased coal power generation in the event that Russian gas supplies suddenly stop.

The analysis finds that 14 GW of coal-fired plants have been placed on standby, adding 1.5 per cent to the EU's total installed power generation capacity (920 GW). The majority are in Germany, which approved 8 GW of reserve capacity as part of its Replacement Power Plant Provision Act adopted on July 8.

Even in the worst-case scenario where these reserve coal plants run throughout 2023 on a load factor of 65 per cent, they would generate 60 TWh of coal-fired electricity, which is enough to power Europe for about one week.

From a climate perspective, the net additional CO2 emissions in 2023 would be approximately 30 million tonnes, representing 1.3 per cent of total 2021 EU CO2 emissions and 4 per cent of annual power sector emissions.

The long-term outlook is clear -- coal has no future in Europe. No European country has reversed its commitment to phase out coal by 2030 at the latest. The current crisis has acted as a catalyst for an accelerated European clean energy transition.

In May, the European Commission published its updated REPowerEU communication. In those plans, it had already incorporated an increase in coal power (plus 105 TWh) and falling gas power (minus 240 TWh) without derailing EU climate objectives.

Analysis by Ember reveals that based on the RePowerEU targets, renewables would account for 69 per cent of electricity production by 2030.

Ember senior analyst Sarah Brown said: "Europe finds itself in this urgent situation due to past energy policy mistakes. Despite numerous warning signs, EU member states ignored the risks of over-reliance on imported gas and neglected the need to rapidly replace this with domestic renewables.

"Consequently, it now faces the difficult, emergency decision of temporarily relying on coal while substantially ramping up its clean energy deployment. Mistakes Asia cannot afford to repeat."