COP21 and reality.
Pakistan
turns to coal to keep factories running
To
tackle chronic energy shortages Pakistan plans to mine and burn
millions of tonnes of coal, helped by China’s money and expertise.
19
January, 2016
LONDON,
19 January, 2016 –
Till now, Pakistan has not used the bulk of its coal reserves –
some of the largest in the world – for power generation. Not any
more.
Within
the last month the government in Islamabad has signed a number of
financial and technological agreements with China aimed at exploiting
massive coal reserves at
the Tharparkar mine in Sindh province, in the south of the
country.
Under the
terms of the agreements, 3.8
million tonnes of coal will be produced each year at the Tharparkar
open-cast mine to fuel a 660MW power plant and other facilities.
The
estimated cost of the project is US$2bn: China’s banks and private
companies will supply US$1.5 billion in loans, while Pakistan will
contribute US$500 m in both private and public finance.
High
risk
Scientists
say the mining and burning of coal is one of the main drivers of
climate change from human causes. The coal at Tharparkar is
mainly lignite –
one of the least energy-intensive and most polluting types of coal.
Pakistan
is thought to be one of the countries most at risk from climate
change: in recent years it has endured a number
of floods and droughts,
and in the summer of 2015 more than 1,200 people died in a
searing heatwave.
Despite government
declarations that
it would prioritise climate change, Pakistan has shown little
appetite for tackling the issue.
At
the recent climate summit in Paris, Pakistan pledged to reduce its
emissions of climate-changing greenhouse gases by 5% over 2012 levels
by 2030 – a figure sharply
criticised as being far too modest by
a number of the country’s own climate experts.
The
energy produced by the lignite deposits at Tharparkar will be mainly
directed at helping alleviate serious power shortages in Karachi, a
city of more than 20 million people which is Pakistan’s main
industrial centre.
Oil
and water
At
present Pakistan depends on imported oil for 65% of its energy, while
hydro makes up an additional 30% of the
national energy mix: there
are also three nuclear power plants, and wind
and solar are
fast-growing energy sources.
Environmentalists
say the new coal-powered power plants will only worsen the country’s
serious pollution problem. Karachi is already among the
world’s most polluted cities.
The
development of the Tharparkar coal field is part of an
ambitious multi-billion dollar Pakistan/China economic development
programme aimed
at linking the remote western provinces of China to Karachi and other
ports on the Arabian Sea.
China
– the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases – has pledged
to cut back on the use of coal for power generation.
But
critics say Beijing is pursuing contradictory policies – cutting
back on pollution at home, while encouraging heavily polluting
projects abroad. – Climate
News Network
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