The Citizen (Gauteng)

Austria fires up mothballed coal-fuelled power station

- Denise Hruby

Austria – At the Mellach coal power plant in southern Austria, spider webs have taken over the conveyor belts and plants and flowers have sprung up around the vast lot that once stored coal.

The plant, Austria’s last coal-fuelled power station, was closed in the spring of 2020, but now the government – nervous that Russia may cut its crucial gas deliveries further – has decided to get the site ready again.

“I never would have imagined that we would restart the factory,” Peter Probst, a 55-year-old welder, told AFP.

“It’s really sad to be so dependent on gas,” he added.

Europe had been trying to move away from coal in the fight against climate change.

But as Russia has cut gas deliveries in the wake of the sanctions the West has imposed on it for the war in Ukraine, European countries are turning back to coal.

Today, the Mellach plant’s white-and-red chimney stands out amid fields of corn and pumpkins, the city of Graz in the distance.

Inside, the walls are black, and coal dust clings to the doors and railings.

About 450 000 tons of coal were stored at the plant before its closure, as Austria’s conservati­ve-Greens coalition aimed to have all electricit­y come from renewable resources by 2030.

Site manager Christof Kurzmann-Friedl says the plant operated by supplier Verbund can be ready again in “about four months” – just in time to help tackle winter gas shortages.

Chancellor Karl Nehammer insisted on Monday that the plant would only go online if necessary, while Austria holds on to its goals to reduce emissions.

“It’s really an emergency measure,” the conservati­ve told said at a foreign briefing.

“It’s really something that shows how extraordin­ary our times are. We must prepare for any eventualit­y.”

The 230MW power plant would take over from the nearby gas-fired plant, also operated by Verbund, which currently supplies heating to Graz’s 300 000 inhabitant­s, according to Kurzmann-Friedl.

He warned, however, that the site must still be readied, hooking up all the equipment again, in addition to hiring qualified personnel, and above all finding enough coal.

Before, the coal mainly came from mines in Poland’s Silesia region, which the Polish government is aiming to shut.

Because coal prices have risen by as much as three times since 2020, the power produced by the plant will also be more expensive, Kurzmann-Friedl said.

The opposition Social Democrats slammed the decision as an act of desperatio­n. “Will the next step be the reactivati­on of Zwentendor­f?” the opposition asked, referring to the country’s only nuclear power plant. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? GREEN BACKTRACK. The power station in Mellach, Austria, this week, two years after it was shut down.
Picture: AFP GREEN BACKTRACK. The power station in Mellach, Austria, this week, two years after it was shut down.

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