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Land recultivation next to Boxberg coal-fired power plant.
Land recultivation next to Boxberg coal power plant, Germany. Credit: Thomas Liske.
EU EMISSIONS
25 January 201711:02

‘Huge’ coal-to-gas switch drives down EU power emissions

Simon Evans

01.25.17

Simon Evans

25.01.2017 | 11:02am
EU emissions ‘Huge’ coal-to-gas switch drives down EU power emissions

Europe’s power-sector CO2 emissions fell 4.5% in 2016 after a “huge” switch from coal- to gas-fired generation, according to new analysis.

Thefiguresare jointly published by the thinktanksSandbagandAgora Energiewendetoday. They show coal generation across the EU falling by 94 terawatt hours (TWh), down 12% on a year earlier. Gas output was up 101TWh, a 20% increase (see chart, below).

Changes in the source of EU electricity generation in 2016 compared to 2015. Source: Analysis by Sandbag and Agora Energiewende.

Changes in the source of EU electricity generation in 2016 compared to 2015. Source:yabo亚博体育app下载由沙袋和集市Energiewende。

The coal-to-gas switch was enough to reduce EU power-sector CO2 emissions by 4.5%, to 1,018m tonnes of CO2 in 2016, the analysis says.

Around half of the decrease in coal generation, and half the increase in gas, took place in the UK. Earlier this month,亚慱官网analysis found UK coal generation fell below wind output in 2016. Germany and Spain each contributed around another 15% of the coal cut in 2016.

The coal to gas switch was driven equally by four factors, according to Sandbag and Agora. First, theclosureof old coal plants in the UK. Second, the impact of the UK’s top up carbon tax, known as thecarbon price floor. Third, a market response to cheaper gas prices and, fourth, gas filling in for falling output from nuclear and hydro.

It’s worth noting that while the story last year was one of coal-to-gas switching, in thelonger term煤和天然气both declined, with reduced demand and low-carbon sources taking their place.

You can read more about how the EU power sector is changing in the fullreportfrom Agora and Sandbag. For instance, the renewable share of electricity generation in the UK increased by 17 percentage points between 2010 and 2016, the third-largest rise after Denmark (25 percentage points) and Lithuania (22).

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