Smoke bellows from the chimneys of Belchatow Power Station, Europe's largest biggest coal-fired power plant, on May 7, 2009 file photo. (Peter Andrews/Reuters)

Poland is in an energy bind

Heavily reliant on coal, Poland is facing pressure to switch to renewables while its facilities already need an upgrade.

By Jan Cienski - GlobalPost
Published: November 27, 2009 15:48 ET

KATOWICE, Poland — Carbon dioxide and global warming have an entirely different meaning when more than 90 percent of your electricity is generated from coal.

That is why Poland has become the leader of a coalition of European coal-burning countries determined to ensure that the costs of CO2 emissions mitigation is borne fairly by wealthy countries as well as poorer developing ones.

The latest fight is over the European Union’s proposal to spread the pain of reducing emissions so that poorer countries also do their share in cutting greenhouse gasses. Poland is adamant that any aid paid to poorer countries in the rest of the world should come mainly from the wealthiest nations of Europe.

“We do not believe that the poorer countries of Europe will help the poorer countries of the world on behalf of the richer European countries,” said Poland's Finance Minister Jacek Rostowski.

The issue is an acute one for Poland because coal is by far the country's main source of energy, and there is no sign of that situation ending in the foreseeable future.

A new plan that looks at the country’s energy needs to 2030, which was accepted by the government earlier in November, is frank about coal’s importance: “Eliminating coal from the portfolio of primary energy resources would worsen Poland’s energy security,” says the document.

The plan does make some concessions to environmental concerns. Energy derived from coal is to drop from 94 percent today to 60 percent in 2030, with the rest made up by a new nuclear plant, renewable energy and gas.

Poland’s current reliance on coal is making it a growing target of environmental groups. In the leadup to an EU summit last month, Donald Tusk, Poland’s prime minister, was portrayed as a green Frankenstein monster (next to a Nicolas Sarkozy Dracula, Angela Merkel skeleton and Gordon Brown witch) above a plea asking EU leaders to support a climate finance package.

But the pressure has not swayed Poland from its strategy. The country is gradually shifting to less polluting forms of energy under pressure from the EU, which has committed to its ambitious 20/20/20 program — producing 20 percent of the EU’s energy with renewables and a 20 percent reduction in CO2 emissions by 2020.

But for now coal continues to be king.

Comments:

No Comments.

Login or Register to post comments

Recent on Global Green:

Opinion: Why it's time for the honest use of pesticides

Randi Hutter Epstein - Worldview - December 1, 2009 07:02 ET

We need to learn from our mistakes, take a hard look at the science and use DDT where and when it is needed: to save lives.

Eggplant of doom?

Saritha Rai - Global Green - November 30, 2009 07:48 ET

A genetically modified aubergine riles India. But it could help solve a hunger crisis.

India education: Going green

Shailaja Neelakantan - Global Green - November 30, 2009 07:41 ET

A young Indian university shows Yale the way.

Revived German movement protests nuclear energy

Cameron Abadi - Global Green - November 28, 2009 09:20 ET

Chancellor Angela Merkel's support for nuclear power has sparked demonstrations.

Poland is in an energy bind

Jan Cienski - Global Green - November 27, 2009 15:48 ET

Heavily reliant on coal, Poland is facing pressure to switch to renewables while its facilities already need an upgrade.

Where green technology clashes with culture

Heather Murdock - Global Green - November 26, 2009 12:28 ET

In Yemen, traditions and chaotic governance block efforts to build a sustainable water supply.

Brazil tries to preserve the Amazon through financial incentives

Seth Kugel - Global Green - November 25, 2009 07:44 ET

Save a tree and get money, a brick walkway and new metal roofs?

Ireland inundated by record rainfall

Conor O'Clery - Ireland - November 25, 2009 06:59 ET

Experts say climate change should not be blamed.

What China expects from the Copenhagen climate talks

William Dowell - Global Green - November 23, 2009 20:54 ET

An interview with Chinese Ambassador to Switzerland Dong Jinyi.

Mexico goes green — or does it?

Michael E. Miller - Global Green - November 23, 2009 17:04 ET

President Calderon is trying to become a leader on climate change. But is it all for show?

UAE: Can gas-guzzing sheiks go green?

Tom Hundley - Middle East - November 23, 2009 12:08 ET

Abu Dhabi builds the world's first zero-carbon, zero-waste city powered by renewable energy.

Moroccan desert blooms with organic farms

Solana Pyne - Morocco - November 23, 2009 12:04 ET

Meet India's organic tea king

Jason Overdorf - India - November 21, 2009 09:15 ET

Insane, or insanely smart? You decide.

Would you eat this lemur?

Nicolas Brulliard - South Africa - November 21, 2009 08:59 ET

Madagascar's rare primates are illegally hunted and sold for their meat.

Cuba tries to keep the lights on

Nick Miroff - Cuba - November 20, 2009 06:55 ET

Cuba gets plenty of oil from Venezuela. So why is it adopting "extreme measures" to avoid blackouts?

A renewable energy lobby seeks power in Brussels

Paul Ames - Global Green - November 19, 2009 21:00 ET

The European Renewable Energy Council thinks renewables could supply 100 percent of Europe's future energy needs.

Nigeria to press First World on climate change

Shyamantha Asokan - Nigeria - November 16, 2009 12:22 ET

Growing chorus of African countries calls for pledges to a climate change fund at Copenhagen.

Indonesia: The home of "Green Islam"

Peter Gelling - Indonesia - November 16, 2009 06:25 ET

Can Quranic teaching save the planet? Many in the world's most-populous Muslim nation think so.

The race for carbon neutrality

Alex Leff - Costa Rica - November 13, 2009 06:31 ET

Costa Rica wants to be the first country to go entirely carbon neutral. But do rising automobile emissions threaten that goal?

On Location: Haryana — India's looming food crisis

Jason Overdorf - India - November 12, 2009 16:45 ET