Bloomberg
The Polish government’s hopes to get special treatment from the European Union for its coal-dependent economy may be quashed by the bloc’s strict approach to limiting the dirty fuel.
The EU’s largest eastern economy needs to build more coal-fired power plants to avoid blackouts and an economic slump, Poland’s energy minister said in the southern city of Katowice. That puts him on a collision course with the EU’s representative for Energy Union, who reiterated at the same event that the regulator won’t allow subsidies for coal-fired plants.
Poland has ignored EU calls to quickly walk away from the highly polluting energy source, saying its economy is too dependent on coal. Energy Minister Krzysztof Tchorzewski claimed western Europe is partly to blame for the nation’s reliance on coal, when it allowed the Soviet Union to take control over Poland after World War II.
“Nobody is plotting against Poland,†Maros Sefcovic, the European Commission’s vice president for Energy Union, said
in Katowice, the capital of
the nation’s coal region. “It’s
not the Commission which wants to have 100 percent of renewables when dealing with a country: but it’s Google, it’s Ikea, it’s Tesco.â€
Poland generates more than 80 percent of electricity from coal, mainly from its own deposits. The government says reducing that to 50 percent by 2050, the maximum achievable level, will cost 200 billion zloty ($52 billion).
BLACK VERSUS GREEN
For the time being, the plan is for the state-controlled utilities to add 10 gigawatts of coal-fired capacity by 2025 at a cost of as much as 60 billion zloty. The government is also seeking to introduce a capacity market mechanism that will pay power producers for keeping their plants available, shielding them from potential losses on the new projects. It estimates the solution will bring the utilities 26 billion zloty in additional payments by 2027.
“The Polish view on the energy policy is completely different to that of the EU’s,†said Pawel Puchalski, head of research at BZ WBK SA in Warsaw. “It’s difficult to marry the two. They are rather green and we are definitely black.â€
He doesn’t see the capacity market being backed by the bloc as Poland “can’t expect to get free gifts†and count on the EU to agree to yearly payments of 3 billion zloty to utilities. However, Puchalski said the government will somehow find a way to build new plants. The cabinet of the ruling Law & Justice party has made rescuing coal producers its priority and providing stable demand for the fuel is crucial for the miners’ existence.
Poland’s plan may fall on deaf ears as the EU is strongly insisting on slashing greenhouse gases. The government is already locking horns with the bloc after it started a proce-
dure against Brussels, known as the yellow card. It argues that proposals for new carbon dioxide limits rule out the construction of coal-fired plants and deny the nation its right to shape its energy mix.