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Wednesday
02 Dec 2020

German Energy Regulator Awards Permits to Close Hard Coal-to-Power Plants

02 Dec 2020  by Reuters   

Germany's energy regulator on Tuesday said some 4,788 megawatts (MW) worth of hard coal-fired power generation capacity may close on Jan 1, 2021 as part of a policy to take carbon-polluting capacity out of the market.

The average payment that operators will receive to shut their plants is 66,259 euros ($79,371.66) per MW, the Bundesnetzagentur regulator said in a statement, adding that it would spend 317 million euros in total.

Germany has decided to completely abandon coal as a source of energy by 2038.

Separate offset schemes for shutdowns in the separate brown coal-to-power industry, which encompasses domestic mining and burning of lignite, are still under review by the European Commission.

The list of plants affected includes Swedish utility Vattenfall's plant with two blocks A and B at Moorburg near Hamburg.

The other plants out of a total 11 are Steag's Walsum 9, RWE's Westfalen and Ibbenbueren, Uniper's Heyden, Suedzucker's Brottewitz and Warburg, Infraserv Hoechst's block HKW, Stadtwerke Bremen's Kraftwerk Hafen block 6 and Pfeifer & Langen's plant at Juelich.

Vattenfall said in a statement the payments will allow it to phase out the two Moorburg plants earlier than previously planned.

Unless grid companies object to their closure on network security grounds, Moorburg would close on July 1, 2021 at the latest. They have until early March, 2021 to object.

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