Electricity

Greece to start shutting down coal power plants

Greece coal power plants

Photo: Iwona Olczyk/Pixabay

Published

September 20, 2019

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

September 20, 2019

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

A business plan being drafted by the management of majority state-owned Public Power Corporation (PPC) includes a “sweeping divestment” of its coal power plants in Greece, Ekathimerini writes.

The plan to start shutting down PPC’s coal-fired power plants, which is expected to be ready by mid-November, is meant to be factored into the structural changes of the electricity market in Greece and the post-bailout assessment of the Greek economy by creditors.

Greek Environment and Energy Minister Kostis Hatzidakis’ directions to PPC’s management provide for PPC’s streamlining and the full adoption of European regulations for a transition to the post-lignite era, according to the report.

In response, the power utility’s management has started a full cost analysis of the lignite plants to decide which ones will continue to operate and which will be shut down, with sustainability being the sole criterion.

Out of the 14 lignite plants PPC has today, the state-run utility will likely hang onto the plant at Agios Dimitrios and a new unit at Ptolemaida, which is under construction, according to the report.

The gradual withdrawal will likely begin in the first half of 2020, Hatzidakis told Kathimerini in an interview, adding that the first units to go will be Amyntaio and Megalopoli.

PPC is already examining plans to deal with the fallout of the closure of the lignite plants on jobs and on local communities whose economies have relied on those units for over a century.

The rescue plan for PPC, burdened with more than EUR 2.4 billion of arrears from unpaid bills, include scrapping the so-called NOME auctions, selling a majority stake in the Hellenic Electricity Distribution Network Operator (HEDNO/DEDDIE), closing of lignite-powered units (Amyntaio I, II and Megalopoli III) and increasing PPC’s investment in renewable energy, in cooperation with private companies, Ekathimerini wrote.

The two-unit Amyntaio has an overall installed capacity of 600 MW, while the Megalopoli III is a 300 MW power plant unit.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Serbian oil company NIS installs 6 8 MW solar power plant

Serbian oil company NIS installs 6.8 MW solar power plant

13 March 2026 - Gazprom-owned Serbian oil refiner and service station chain NIS commissioned its ground-mounted 6.8 MW solar power plant. It is one of the biggest in the country.

croatia cropex slovenia market power exchange

CROPEX expands into Slovenian electricity market

13 March 2026 - The move marks the first time the Croatian Power Exchange will operate outside Croatia, according to CROPEX CEO Ante Mikulić

montenegro loan power line ebrd asanovic bowman

CGES to invest EUR 15 million in BiH-Montenegro-Albania power line

13 March 2026 - Montenegro's TSO Crnogorski Elektroprenosni Sistem plans to invest EUR 200 million over the next five years

carbon storage Kent Energean Prinos North Aegean Sea Greece

EnEarth gets permit for carbon storage at offshore oil field in Greece

12 March 2026 - Integrated energy services firm Kent won a contract for front-end engineering design for the Prinos CO2 project in Greece for carbon storage.