Romania seeks coal plant closure delay from EU
13 Oct 2023
Romania has backtracked on its commitments regarding the
shutdown schedule for coal power plants. Minister of Energy Sebastian Burduja
said he would ask the European Union for a delay in switching the units in CE
Oltenia to reserve.
A study by
Romania’s electricity transmission system operator Transelectrica is
supposed to provide arguments for postponing some deadlines in the coal
phaseout process. Minister of Energy Sebastian
Burduja said after a meeting of a working group responsible for the operation
of thermal power plants that he would propose a delay in intermediate targets.
In return for
funding through the National Recovery and
Resilience Plan (NRRP or, in Romanian, PNRR), the government
has pledged to end the use of coal by 2032. After retiring 660 MW in
coal plant capacity last year, another 1.4 GW is supposed to be switched to
reserve by the end of 2025, leaving only 1.1 GW online.
Romania
earlier accepted the obligation to end regular supply from 1.4 GW in capacity
by the end of 2025 and leave what’s left of CE Oltenia’s old units on standby
The
forthcoming round would leave the capacity of state-owned Complexul Energetic
(CE) Oltenia, the country’s main coal hub, only on standby. Following
discussions with trade unionists, who are asking for the planned closing of a
mine in Gorj to be
postponed by two years, Burduja said he would take the matter to the European
Commission. He pointed to the study expected from Transelectrica.
“We all want
to breathe cleaner air, but we all need the light bulb to turn on when we flip
the switch. Romania’s energy security comes first,” Burduja stated.
Romania is
counting on leeway from the EU on account of the assistance that the government
in Bucharest provided to war-torn Ukraine and neighboring Moldova, CursDeGuvernare reported.
CE Oltenia is
undergoing massive transformation from coal to gas and renewables.