News

Croatia first in the region to close down old thermal power plants

Published

June 21, 2015

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

June 21, 2015

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Old power plants with a total capacity of 1.2 GW are due to be shut down in Croatia, and the state electricity distribution system currently controls 3.65 GW, energy expert Marijan Kalea told Novi list newspaper. With economic recovery, energy needs would rise, so at least 2 GW may be missing by 2020, he claims, including possible 1 GW from the rise in consumption. The country is in the same position it was five years ago, because of long negotiations with Marubeni Corporation of Japan, which was supposed to build the 500 MW thermal power plant Plomin C, while the construction of a 68 MW hydro power facility Ombla near Dubrovnik is out of sight, gas-powered generation unit of 500 MW in Osijek is still in its early stage, and a plan for a thermal power plant in Ploče was opposed by citizens on a referendum, Kalea added. Old thermal power units including Sisak, Rijeka, Plomin 1 and TE-TO Osijek need to be shut down by January 1, 2018 because of excess emissions, he said. New capacities were supposed to be launched by now, Kalea stressed and added that the strategic investments legislation did make permit issuing quicker but that the efforts were insufficient.

The only new power plant launched in the last two and a half decades is the five-year old Lešće hydro unit of 42 MW, while all other projects are only for upgrading and reconstructing existing generation capacities, the report said. HEP Group (Hrvatska elektroprivreda), the national power company, controls seven thermal and 26 hydro power plants, Novilist.hr said.

Related Articles

Ljiljana Velimirović wins Female Leader in Sustainable Energy 2025 award

Ljiljana Velimirović is the Female Leader in Sustainable Energy for 2025

17 October 2025 - Ljiljana Velimirović, Project Manager 1, Investment Sector, Serbian state-owned power utility Elektroprivreda Srbije, is the recipient of the Female Leader in Sustainable Energy award for 2025.

Montenegro’s EPCG to develop floating solar, thermal batteries, high-altitude wind turbines

16 October 2025 - Memoranda of understanding (MoUs) were signed within the framework of the European Union – Montenegro Investment Conference

CEO Dejan Paravan leaving Slovenian state owned GEN energija report

UPDATE: CEO Dejan Paravan leaving Slovenian state-owned GEN energija

16 October 2025 - Dejan Paravan has resigned as Slovenian state-owned GEN energija's chief executive and is reportedly joining NGEN

First floating solar power plant with vertical panels commissioned

World’s first floating solar power plant with vertical panels comes online

16 October 2025 - A floating solar power plant with vertically mounted panels has been put into operation on an artificial lake in Germany