Environment

Energy Community launches infringement procedures against BiH, Kosovo*, North Macedonia, Serbia

Energy Community infringement BiH Kosovo North Macedonia Serbia

Photo: Bodoklecksel / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/legalcode

Published

March 17, 2021

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

March 17, 2021

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Large combustion plants in four contracting parties in the Western Balkans surpassed air pollution limits in 2018 and 2019, prompting the Energy Community Secretariat to start a process intended to bring them into compliance.

After issuing a warning last month, the Energy Community Secretariat launched dispute settlement procedures against Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo*, North Macedonia and Serbia for failing to meet the limits of air pollution emissions in 2018 and 2019. The ceilings in question were determined in national emission reduction plans or NERPs, instruments for compliance with the Large Combustion Plants Directive.

All four contracting parties have excessive sulfur dioxide emissions

Serbia breached the limit for sulfur dioxide while the infringement procedure for North Macedonia concerns sulfur dioxide and dust, also called particulate matter or PM. Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo* failed to meet the ceilings for both said pollutants and also nitrogen oxides, according to the announcement.

Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo* failed to meet the ceilings for sulfur dioxide, particulate matter and nitrogen oxides

Dispute settlement is a preliminary enforcement procedure against contracting parties, which can react to the allegation of non-compliance with Energy Community law within two months. In the meantime, the secretariat can establish the full background of the case. Interested parties may be granted access to the case file and may submit written observations during the preliminary procedure.

Breaches caused by coal power plants

Large combustion plants are facilities with a capacity of more than 50 MW. In the case of the four contracting parties, almost all the air pollution in the segment originates from lignite-fired thermal power plants.

The energy sector is one of the main contributors and it is responsible for high health and environmental costs and many premature deaths, the Energy Community Secretariat said earlier. It has been pointing to of breaches in most of the 16 large combustion plants in Serbia. The two desulfurization plants that were completed in thermal power plants in Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina still aren’t operational, while two other projects are underway in EPS’s TENT division in Obrenovac and another one is planned for Kostolac.

Of note, Energy Community Secretariat Director Janez Kopač told Beta news agency that within three years the European Union may introduce the carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), effectively a tax on carbon-dioxide for imports. The Sofia Declaration, signed by all Western Balkan countries in November, implies complete decarbonization by 2050, which means there would be no more coal-fired thermal power plants, he said.

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

Three cities reviving protests against Rio Tinto lithium project Jadar in Serbia

Three cities reviving protests against Rio Tinto’s lithium project in Serbia

20 July 2025 - Opponents of Rio Tinto's plan to mine and process a lithium and boron ore called jadarite in western Serbia held a protest in Loznica

bih epbih waste incineration tpp tuzla trial

BiH’s power utility EPBiH cancels waste co-incineration trial in Tuzla coal plant

18 July 2025 - Power utility Elektroprivreda Bosne i Hercegovine aborted a waste co-incineration test at its Tuzla coal power plant

Belgrade in focus challenges and solutions for sustainable urban development Ivan Gazdic cms

Belgrade in focus: challenges and solutions for sustainable urban development

17 July 2025 - The author of the feature is Ivan Gazdić, Attorney at Law and Partner at Petrikić & Partneri AOD in cooperation with CMS Reich-Rohrwig Hainz

Successful completion of the WISE serbia mentorship program trust, support, and personal transformation

WISE Serbia mentorship program successfully completed: trust, support, and personal growth

24 June 2025 - The first mentorship program of the WISE Serbia women’s network in sustainable energy, the green economy, and climate action was successfully concluded with an event held in Belgrade