Electricity

Share of coal power in Greece tumbles to zero

Share-coal-power-Greece-tumbles-to-zero

Photo: Western Balkans Investment Framework / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/legalcode.en

Published

May 20, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

May 20, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Greece went seven days without coal power in the system, as natural gas plants and renewables were far more competitive and amid high emissions costs. Lignite had a mere 2% share in April.

Coal power is being squeezed out of the market in several countries in Southeastern Europe. Just a few years ago, governments were hesitating to set ambitious coal phaseout dates, concerned about the security of energy supply. The remaining lignite-fired thermal power plants in Greece have been de facto out of the market for seven days, as gas alternated with renewables in the lead, Energypress reported.

The biggest factor is the recent jump in carbon dioxide allowances within the European Union’s Emissions Trading System. At EUR 70 per ton, lignite is largely unprofitable in electricity production. On sunny and windy days, especially on weekends and holidays, when demand is low, the price of imported renewable energy is much lower. Gas has lately been much more competitive than lignite as well.

Uncompetitiveness and the introduction of stricter environmental rules are also jeopardizing such facilities, especially in Bulgaria. As part of its energy market design reform, the European Union will allow member states to provide financial support to essential power plants through so-called capacity mechanisms. But it still translates to high and unpopular budget costs.

In Greece, coal had a mere 2% share in gross final consumption in April.

In addition, the Meliti and Megalopolis units are less available due to the poor quality of the lignite at hand, according to the Independent Power Transmission Operator (IPTO or Admie).

The share of gas plants projected for today was 43.1% against 36.1% for renewable electricity plants, the article adds. Imports accounted for 13.3% and hydropower plants covered 3.7%.

Gas-fired facilities ranged between 30.6% and 55.4% over the past seven days. Renewables had between 25.6% and 36.1%. Imports varied from 10.6% to 25.5% on a daily basis and hydroelectric units had a share of 3.7% to 4.7%.

Greece plans to phase out coal by 2028.

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

hybrid solar projects LCOE batteries BESS wind solarpower europe

Hybrid solar cuts levelized cost of electricity 10% compared to standalone projects

31 March 2025 - Hybrid solar supports system flexibility, improves the cost-effectiveness of an asset, and makes energy generation more reliable

ja solar Borussia Dortmund signal iduna park

Largest solar power plant on football stadium to be installed at Signal Iduna Park

28 March 2025 - The home of Borussia Dortmund is set to become the site of the world's largest solar power plant installed on a stadium roof

Sungrow ESS Experience Day Munich accelerating sustainable future Europe

Sungrow ESS Experience Day Munich: accelerating to a sustainable future for Europe

28 March 2025 - Experts from across Europe exchanged thoughts at ESS Experience Day in Munich on the role of energy storage systems for grid support and the energy transition

serbia eps hydrogen dusan zivkovic

Serbia’s EPS examining green hydrogen production

27 March 2025 - Serbia's state-owned power company Elektroprivreda Srbije is analyzing options for the production and use of green hydrogen