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The demand in licenses for natural gas-burning power plants is falling, the head of Turkey’s energy regulator has said. Hürriyet photo

The demand in licenses for natural gas-burning power plants is falling, the head of Turkey’s energy regulator has said. Hürriyet photo

The traditional wintertime smell of burning coal across Turkey appears set to become far more prevalent as the country turns to smoke-generating, coal-burning plants in an effort to break its large dependency on natural gas.

Applications for construction of gas-burning plants decreased, while those for local and imported coal power plants have risen, Turkey’s energy market regulator, EPDK, said yesterday. “Using local resources to lower the production costs, as well as the Energy Ministry’s new model that opened up coal reserves to exploitation by the private sector, contributes to creating considerable added value, which helps balance the current account deficit.”

The country has had annual investments worth almost 4,000 megawatts in the energy sector in the last five years, EPDK President Hasan Köktaş. said, adding that the stake of natural gas power plants in these investments had begun to fall. 

Although investors’ building license applications for natural gas power plants had made up the major part among all applications in the energy sector, this number has considerably fallen because investors are withdrawing and canceling applications, according to officials.

Köktaş also said last year’s cancelation of incentives of around 20 or 21 percent for natural gas power plants had increased the cost of construction while reducing investors’ attention. 
He said the policy was to lower the stake of natural gas in electricity generation, so the situation does not indicate any problem as far as they are concerned.

Turkey produces around half of its electricity from natural gas, a source for which it is largely dependent on Russia, Iran and Azerbaijan. The government is also harboring hopes for the planned Trans-Anatolia Pipeline (TANAP) project, which is slated to carry large amounts of Azeri gas to western Turkey, from where it will be transported to Europe. Investors have recently begun applying mostly to build coal power plants, including both local and imported coal, said Köktaş. He also said applications for imported coal power plants had jumped due to stocked raw material and resource diversification, adding that the costs of these plants were lower than gas.

Energy Minister Taner Yıldız announced Jan. 27 that there were 510 million tons of coal reserves worth $50 billion in the Ergene River Basin in the Thrace region of Turkey. The reserves will be opened for exploration within the next few days, he said. The Energy and Natural Resources Ministry recently discovered 1.8 billion tons of lignite reserves, enough to fuel a thermal power station generating 5,000 megawatts of electricity for 30 to 40 years, in the Central Anatolian province of Konya. Turkey also signed a deal with the United Arab Emirates to develop coal fields in the southern province of Kahramanmaraş.

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However, the European Association for Renewable Energy Turkey’s president, Tanay Sıdkı Uyar, said Turkey should primarily focus on energy efficiency by using minimal energy in transport, housing, industry and agriculture. Turkey could generate enough energy to satisfy all its energy needs if it builds wind, solar, biomass and geothermal power plants by 2020, added Uyar, the head of the Department of Energy at Marmara University, in a phone interview yesterday.

Zehra Aydoğan from Istanbul contributed to this report.

January/29/2013

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Cem Ian Hanley

1/30/2013 5:18:44 PM

Come on Tayyip, use the sunshine that we have for 8 months of the year in abundance. Coal,(even sub bituminous lignite) power plants might be acceptable in remote areas, but it is in the cities where even the present level of lignite burning is deadly. You live in a clean place, unlike most of your voters. Free poison for votes seems to be the trade off.

mr who

1/30/2013 10:11:46 AM

It’s against the will of God, it’s against the will of the living planet and should be kept for the future and be as used as a petrochemical substitute for medical, farming and general industrial use.

Agnes Smith

1/29/2013 11:31:58 PM

Faruk, Brit & Mara - All well said! - There seems to be no environmental conscience and short sighted ignorance. Who is in charge with this? Told to have more babies and waste less bread? Not to mention open cast mines. Killing the future onbehalf of a population not able to equate the collateral damage of the future. Those who just struggle to heat their homes, eat beans and watch TV will never realise the destuction of their homeland, just grateful to be well.

Brit in Turkey

1/29/2013 6:28:18 PM

mara: Absolutely. There is a power station at Yatağan, a drab town on the road from Muğla to İzmir. The road to Bodrum passes through the town. The pollution from the power station, which provides power to a large part of the south-west, has to be seen to be believed. The town is often enveloped in a brown/grey fog. The residents have complained many times but nothing is done. The life expectancy there must be very short. I don't know the fuel used, but it seems unlikely to be gas or oil.

mara mcglothin

1/29/2013 4:06:03 PM

BRIT You combine this with the demolition of the forested areas on the Asia side of Istanbul and you have a black hole. There are some advances of clean coal burning plants, but in Turkey, with its lack of regulation and oversight, this is simply a disaster waiting to happen.

Brit in Turkey

1/29/2013 12:28:59 PM

The pollution will also cut down the population, so we will need more babies.......

Faruk Beisser

1/29/2013 9:51:43 AM

Of course there will be more coal plants to poison Turks through using the worst coal the world has. After all, when enough coal plants belch their poison into the air, Gülen/Erbakan AKP and its energy minister then can point to the necessity to eliminate these plants through nuclear power plants.
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