Deprived of Coal, Kiev Increasingly Desperate. Blackouts Imminent
- Coal is used to produce 40% of Ukraine electricity
- State of emergency in electricity market proclaimed
- Yet another lever Moscow has over Kiev - we've lost count, there are so many...
- Another obvious thing the EU and US completely overlooked
Firewood – can it come to this?
28
November, 2014
LONDON/BRUSSELS,
Nov 26 (Reuters) - A shortage of coal, rather than gas, is likely to
plunge Ukraine into freezing darkness this winter as conflict in its
east seals off supplies that used to make it self sufficient.
Kiev
has said any hopes it had of Russian coal coming to the rescue were
dashed when Moscow suspended exports.
Ukraine
has declared a state of emergency in its electricity market and
blackouts are imminent unless it can import coal, analysts and
industry officials say.
"We
have no energy reserves now, everything works on maximum and every
technical problem can lead to sharp power cuts," said Andrey
Favorov, managing director of energy investment company Energy
Resources of Ukraine.
"The
only way to avoid freezing this winter is to negotiate, to pull out
politics: we need to look at buying coal from reliable traders,
import coal from South Africa, Australia, Vietnam, other countries."
While
EU officials have spent months brokering a deal to try to avert a
supply crisis following Russia's cut-off of gas to Kiev in June,
fighting in east Ukraine has shut down mines and rail links used for
transporting coal to power plants.
Ukraine
was self-sufficient in coal, producing more than 60 million tonnes
last year, but since June separatist fighting in the Donetsk and
Luhansk regions has halted production from 66 coal mines, leaving
only 60 running, European coal association Euracoal said.
It
is estimated that Ukraine needs 1 to 2 million tonnes of imported
coal a month between now and April.
Hydroelectric
and nuclear power plants are running flat out to help cover the
shortfall but the country's old electricity grid and infrastructure
to do not guarantee reliable supply.
Limited
Options
Ukraine
is one of Europe's biggest coal producers and gets roughly 40 percent
of its electricity from coal. The rest comes from nuclear (45
percent), gas (10 percent) and hydroelectric power (5 percent), the
International Energy Agency says.
Russia
cut off its gas because of a row over pricing and unpaid bills. A
fragile deal last month which could lead to the restoration of
supplies, but so far that has not happened as Ukraine has been
avoiding making any upfront payments for new deliveries.
Ukraine's
gas storage sites currently hold around 3.5 months' supply, depending
on the weather.
"While
emergency measures might ease the severity of a power shortage, both
domestic and industrial users will have to be prepared for rolling
outages over this winter," said Ganna Korniyenko, analyst at
Thomson Reuters Point Carbon.
Emergency
measures include cutting consumption and public information campaigns
to save energy, while in the long term the Kiev government is trying
to raise energy prices to market levels to end a culture of energy
waste based on decades of unrealistically cheap energy.
Anthracite,
or hard coal, is used in Ukranian power plants but it makes up around
only 1 percent of world coal reserves and is only mined in just a
handful of countries. Ukraine's ability to pay for that coal is also
hampered by its weak currency.
Ukraine
can import electricity from Russia and the energy ministry said on
Wednesday it will allow this, but in limited quantities.
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