Romania sells decommissioned Mintia coal power plant
31 Aug 2022
Romania’s insolvent Complexul
Energetic Hunedoara (CEH) has sold its Mintia coal-fired power plant to Mass
Group Holding, an Iraqi company with headquarters in Jordan, for EUR 91.2
million. The buyer is required to invest in a new power generation unit that
will mainly use natural gas and renewables.
The
Mintia thermal power plant, with five coal-fired units totaling 1,285 MW, was
shut down in July 2021, having failed to meet EU environmental standards,
according to Romanian media. The plant is located near the city of Deva on the
bank of the Mureş river.
The 1,285 MW Mintia power plant was
shut down in July 2021
The Romanian government has recently decided to push back its
coal phaseout deadline from 2030 to 2032 due to the ongoing energy crisis. The
cabinet also decided not to dismantle some of the thermal power plants it
closes, opting instead to keep them in reserve.
Romania has pushed back its coal
phaseout deadline from to 2032 amid the energy crisis
The
Mintia transaction comes with strings attached, imposed by the Romania’s energy
ministry, as a shareholder. These include the obligation for the buyer to
complete a new 1,290 MW power unit, of which 800 MW is to be based on natural
gas and renewable sources, by the end of 2026.
The buyer plans to invest over EUR 1
billion in Mintia in the coming years
“The
investments in the modernization and development of the Mintia power plant in
the coming years will amount to more than EUR 1 billion,” said Ahmad Ismail
Saleh, chairman of Mass Group Holding, adding that this will include building
new production capacities and bringing the plant into line with European
standards for electricity generation from renewable sources.
The
transaction was carried out through Mass Global Energy Rom, a firm set up for
the purpose of the Mintia acquisition. Mass Group Holding’s head office is
located in Amman, Jordan, but its power generation capacities, totaling 8.5 GW,
are located mainly in Iraq. The group also produces cement, iron, and steel.