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Electricity industry cries foul over resistance to coal power

Posted : Mon, 21 Apr 2008 13:40:09 GMT
Author : DPA
Category : Energy (Environment)
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Hanover, Germany - The electricity industry in Germany, where about 60 new coal-fired power stations are planned, attacked environmentalists Monday and said politicians lacked the courage to tackle the looming energy gap. "We face a backlog of planning permissions," said Michael Feist, president of the BDEW, the industry's federation, on the first day of the Hanover Fair in Germany. The fair has a large section devoted to power-station equipment.

He urged the government to rush through consents, saying 60 projects were scheduled to be commissioned by 2018 in Germany.

He said politicians were too scared of residents' protests against new power plants and lacked backbone.

Coal is being hailed as Germany's sole alternative to nuclear power, which is being phased out. The industry says gas is too expensive and renewable energy is already close to the limits.

Last week, one of the biggest German projects, the 1,640-megawatt Moorburg plant to burn imported hard coal in Hamburg, appeared to move towards oblivion, with a hostile, Green official put in charge of planning consent.

Environmentalists charge that big fossil-fuel stations are a key contributor to global warming.

The electricity companies counter that new plants cause less emissions than old ones which need to be replaced.

Feist said continued planning obstacles would mean old plants being retained and Germany falling short of emissions-reduction targets.

He said renewable energy could only meet 30 per cent at most of German needs by 2020.

"All the people who oppose construction of a power station in their town expect to have electricity come out the sockets in their own homes," he said, adding that if consents did not come through, the industry would build plants for Germany in neighbouring nations.

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They aren't lying about the electricity gap...
By: Andrew , Wed, 23 Apr 2008 00:28:25 GMT

They are slowly moving towards a huge power gap. They will either need to import nuclear generated electricity from
France or build more coal plants.

Wind and solar do not provide base load energy. Wind can go from 60% of capacity to 1% over the course of two hours. This means it’s ability to replace coal power is essentially zero, the coal power plants cannot be brought up quickly enough to ever shut them down, whatever the wind production may be. The E.On report and the original post do correctly state this. Even if advanced forecasting methods enabled one to sometimes shut down coal power plants it would likely not be desirable to do so, since the heat up and cool down stages are the most environmentally damaging and economically expensive (coal used to heat up gigantic metal furnaces generates absolutely NO electricity, only CO2 and other nasty GHGs and cancer causing substances).

Germany might build a number of natural gas power plants, but then they are putting themselves at the mercy of Russia which will doubtless use their natural gas to accomplish Russia's political goals.

Germans will change their opinion once the price of electricity doubles, they loose jobs due to high energy costs and they face brownouts. Until then they'll unrealistic expectations for renewable energy which they can't deliver. Or they'll just continue running horribly polluting coal plants. Germans can thank the green party for having 30% higher CO2 emissions than France.



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