German coal plant closes after just six years, to produce green hydrogen from wind

Authored by reneweconomy.com.au and submitted by Tabodo
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The 1600W Moorburg hard coal (black coal) power station in Hamburg was closed down for good on July 7, reported public broadcaster Tagesschau, just six years after it was opened.

After successfully participating in a government decommissioning tender for payment in return for an early shut down, the 1600MW plant had stopped market operation at the end of 2020 and was only kept operational as a back-up reserve.

According to the German coal exit law, the last coal plant will be shuttered by 2038. While there is a strict timeline for the closure of lignite (brown coal) stations, hard coal stations and small lignite plants can participate in the tender scheme, deciding for themselves when compensation becomes more financially viable than the continued generation of fossil fuel electricity.

NGO Robin Wood said that Moorburg’s end will reduce annual greenhouse gas emissions by up to eight million tonnes. However, other commentators have pointed out that it would be more prudent to close older, more polluting plants first.

But the plant’s owner Vattenfall – like other coal plant operators – has experienced a drop in profits from the plant as the price for CO2 emissions under the European Emission Trading System (EU ETS) is rising, and therefore opted for the decommissioning compensation.

Following the decision for more ambitious 2030 greenhouse gas reduction targets in Germany and the EU, there is an ongoing debate about whether or not the German coal exit agreement must be revisited to introduce an earlier exit date.

The Moorburg plant only became operational in 2015 and was one of the most modern power stations in Germany, Vattenfall said. The company has announced it will pursue a hydrogen project at the Moorburg site, turning offshore wind energy into green hydrogen.

Source: Clean Energy Wire. Reproduced with permission

TheRetenor on July 9th, 2021 at 13:23 UTC »

As a German: Our politicians are fucking corrupt self absorbed retards. We tend to call them Hurensöhne

douira on July 9th, 2021 at 13:13 UTC »

Why did they even build it? They knew they were going to be shutting it down soon

ThirtyMileSniper on July 9th, 2021 at 12:50 UTC »

Wow. If you read the article this seems like a terrible strategic decision in terms of lowering carbon emissions.

This is a new plant with tech and efficiency at the higher end. The decision to permit this plant to close on this fee paid basis while older less efficient plant continue and small inefficient plant that use dirtier fuel continue just seems a bit bizarre.

It also shows that the energy strategy forecasting for Germany was an absolute disaster.

It's great that Germanies renewables are displacing fossil fuels though. That is good news.