Romania to switch its coal plants to reserve as it closes them, without decommissioning
07 Jul 2022
The Romanian cabinet decided to extend the coal phaseout back to
2032. Faced with the energy crisis, it also gave up on the plan to dismantle
some of the thermal power plants that it closes, opting instead to keep them in
reserve.
Just a month after announcing it would accelerate
the coal exit deadline by two years to 2030, Romania backflipped and again
determined 2032 as the final year of the use of the fossil fuel in the country.
In its emergency ordinance, the government gave up from the initiative that was
included in the draft.
Romania vowed in the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP or PNNR) to phase out coal by 2032, so the
proposal to push forward the deadline by two years was a surprise given that
most European countries are turning back to fossil fuels in light of the energy
crisis and the risk of Russian gas supply disruptions.
Romania is increasing the production of coal and reactivating
some of the coal plants that were closed due to financial losses
Furthermore, the cabinet of
Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă gave up on the plan to dismantle some of the
coal-fired thermal power plants that are due for closure. The final version of
the executive order stipulates they would just be kept idle.
Coal plants in the country have
a combined capacity of 4.9 GW. The plans to replace some of it with gas-fired
power plants weren’t changed. Romania is also increasing the production of coal
and reactivating some of the coal plants that halted production earlier over
high costs for carbon dioxide emission permits and the lack of liquidity.
The closure of two coal plant units, planned for the end of this
year, could be postponed
Citing the need to maintain the
safety and stability of the national electricity system, the government left
the possibility to postpone the closure of coal plant units Rovinari 3 and
Turceni 7, totaling 660 MW. They are due to be shut down on December 31. The
emergency ordinance stipulates the closure can be delayed upon the request of
transmission system operator Transelectrica.
Several European Union member states formally stuck with their
climate goals but are still getting retired coal plants back online to prevent a collapse in the electricity and
district heating systems. The emergency measures and planning are being ramped
up to prepare for the winter.
The administration in Brussels is developing its REPowerEU package
with the aim to wean off Russian fossil fuels well before 2030, while also
pushing for faster deployment of renewables.