Chinese funded power plants in CEE Mark Szabo Barbora Horanova Jakob Rammer Introduction Chinese interest in funding power plants around Europe - mainly Balkans China Development Bank and other Chinese banks provide funding, Chinese companies sometimes build them Problem regarding the plants meeting EU standards Poland’s first nuclear power plant built by the Chinese? Why is China so interested in funding these projects? International response Where these plants will be Mostly in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but also other Balkan states Currently developing in Stanari (operating since 2016), Kostolac and Tuzla (currently delayed) Nuclear power plant in Poland, Romania Some problems Economic, environmental and legal weaknesses Health standards far below the levels of Western Europe Plants do not comply with EU standards, upgrade would be costly ‘Opinions on Further Guiding and Regulating the Directions of Overseas Investments’ EU plans to go carbon free by 2050 Paris Agreement goal problematic with these plants Chinese plans to build Poland’s first nuclear power plant Company: China General Nuclear Power Group (CGN)Doubts remain: Why China ? -lower price -financing package -first time for China to build up nuclear power plant beyond its own territory -bound to lead to delays and cost increases Is it even useful for Poland? Why Poland? China+Poland signed Memorandum on nuclear cooperation for civil use. China’s interest in nuclear technology of developed states Bosnia and Herzegovina Currently operating- 5 power coal-fired plants 2 more planned plants -final phase of financing planning resolved All projects financed or built by Chinese companies and banks Greater risks: air pollution leading to increase of death rates,respiratory issues... 'Stranded assets' Bosnia and Herzegovina-already producing enough energy for its needs 2015 investigation: “If Balkan countries actually built all the planned centres for electricity production. They calculated that the region would export 56% of the electricity” “Country with 3.8 million people does not need that many power plants, especially with the existing hydropower plants and the new coal power plant that just started working in 2016” Big Risk: - Bosnia and Herzegovina does not take into account the future costs of CO2 emissions - If is the electrical energy not cheap enough, nobody will buy it Nuclear power in Romania Romania has two nuclear reactors generating almost 20% of its electricity Romania is first commercial nuclear power reactor began operating in 1996.Its second started up in May 2007. China General Nuclear Power has agreed to complete two more units Romanian government support for nuclear energy is strong International Responses and future Outlook ● Critics from Environmentalists and EU regarding pollution issue ● Concerns about Chinese interfering with EU strategy for the reason ● Trojan Horses ● Future will bring increased cooperation and investment, probably more cautious EU ● Investment needed by many CEE countries Thank you for your attention! Any questions? Sources https://bankwatch.org/publication/chinese-financed-coal-projects-in-southeast-europe https://bankwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/China_SEE-coal-briefing_july-7-2018-u pdate.pdf https://www.thegwpf.com/china-builds-funds-europes-new-coal-power-plants/ https://theecologist.org/2018/jul/24/china-expands-coal-power-interests-bosnia-and-herzeg ovina