Romania’s CE Oltenia delays closure of two coal plant units
08 Nov 2022
Two units with a total capacity of 660 MW in coal-fired power
plants Turceni and Rovinari won’t be closed by the end of the year like it was
planned, Chief Executive Officer of CE Oltenia announced.
Romania got its National Recovery and
Resilience Plan approved in Brussels with bold ambitions for the country’s
energy transformation and coal bailout. It also struggled to get a green light
from the European Commission for its massive state aid package for ailing coal
and power producer Complexul Energetic Oltenia.
Using
an option provided in July by the government in Bucharest, the firm now claims
it can’t go ahead with the planned closure of two units in coal-fired thermal
power plants.
Romania is already struggling to meet
deadlines and adopt the legislation necessary for access to European funds
Countries throughout Europe have been
getting idle coal plants back online and postponing closures to maintain the
security of power supply amid the energy crisis. When Bosnia and Herzegovina,
which is not a European Union member state, prolonged the operation of two
units, the Energy Community Secretariat opened an infringement case against
the government.
Romania, already struggling to meet deadlines and
adopt the legislation necessary for access to funds from the National Recovery
and Resilience Plan (NRRP or PNRR) and other EU sources, is trying to get the
EU to renegotiate the terms.
The two units, with 660 MW in
combined capacity, are now scheduled for a switch to reserve
Namely, even though CE Oltenia is
supposed to shut down unit 3 in the Rovinari plant
and unit 7 in Turceni, Chief Executive Officer Daniel Burlan
said they would only be switched to reserve, Economica.net reported.
The
two units have 660 MW in capacity. There are nine coal plants in the utility’s
fleet, with 2.6 GW in total. It stockpiled 900,000 tons of the fuel compared to
the obligatory 735,000 tons. Burlan is convinced the volume would be maintained
at a high level after the winter due to a boost in coal mining.
In
2023, there should be five coal plants in regular operation and another two on
standby, the CEO pointed out. The closure of Rovinari 3 depended on a
modernization project for unit 3, but it suffered delays, he noted.