Thermal power plant Ugljevik halts production due to lack of coal
06 Dec 2024
Thermal power plant Ugljevik in the
Republic of Srpska has halted electricity production due to a lack of coal. The
suspension is reportedly causing daily losses of BAM 550,000 (EUR 281,000),
equivalent to the cost of 5 GWh of electricity, while citizens of Ugljevik were
left without district heating.
The management of state-owned RiTE Ugljevik, which
operates a coal mine and the thermal power plant, blames those who ran the
company in previous years, claiming they did almost nothing to facilitate
land expropriation and mine expansion, forcing the thermal power plant to use
lower-quality coal.
The fact that
the facility has already operated for 220,000 hours, exceeding its designed
operating life, combined with the use of lower-quality coal, has made it
inevitable to increase coal consumption by at least 20%, the management claims
in a statement.
Restarting production at Ugljevik will cost about
BAM 100,000, Žurnal learned.
The news website added that the cost will be even higher if the parent holding,
state-owned power utility Elektroprivreda Republike Srpske (ERS), fails to
deliver the contracted amounts of electricity.
At the end of last year, RiTE Ugljevik had an
accumulated loss of BAM 193.55 million (around EUR 99 million), and it posted a net loss of
BAM 29.9 million (EUR 15.3 million) for January-September 2024.
The production halt at Ugljevik
could result in electricity imports at exorbitant prices
An unnamed
source familiar with the situation told the media outlet that if the production
halt at Ugljevik continues, and other producers in the Republic of Srpska fail
to produce enough electricity, ERS would have to purchase electricity at exorbitant
emergency prices. Last year alone, several mines in the Republic of Srpska, one
of the two political entities of Bosnia and Herzegovina, exported coal worth as
much as BAM 1.5 billion, according to the article.
Ugljevik is the largest emitter of SO2 in
the Western Balkans, despite having a desulfurization unit that cost at least
EUR 85 million to install. The unit has suffered technical difficulties, with
the operator recently admitting it was taken offline, partly due to the
economic burden it posed.
Another major burden on Ugljevik is
last year’s ruling of an arbitration panel in Belgrade, which ordered it to pay
EUR 67 million in compensation to
Slovenian state company Holding Slovenske elektrarne, along with EUR 58.2
million in interest. In addition, RiTE Ugljevik is obliged to deliver a third
of its electricity to the Slovenian company for as long as the thermal power
plant is in operation.
In the
statement regarding the production halt, the Ugljevik management expressed hope
that, with the support of the Government of the Republic of Srpska, the
entity’s Ministry of Energy and Mining, and ERS, it will overcome the
challenges, in the interest of the entity’s energy security and the several
thousand people whose livelihoods depend on the company in one way or another.