Tag: wind power

  • September 5, 2023 UPDATE

    September 5, 2023 UPDATE

    VICTIM Another patient severely
    injured in the blasts in Crevedia (southern Romania) died on Tuesday morning,
    bringing the number of casualties to 5, the Health Ministry announced. The
    victim was of Nepalese origin and had burns on more than 90% of his body. The
    powerful explosions followed by a fire took place, 10 days ago, at an LPG
    station in Crevedia, south of Bucharest, which was operating illegally.




    NATO Together with our Allies, we will continue to
    strengthen the NATO structures on Romanian territory, president Klaus Iohannis
    said on Tuesday. He added that Romania will continue to support Russia-invaded
    Ukraine as long as necessary. Iohannis received the PM of Luxembourg Xavier
    Bettel at the military base in Cincu, central Romania, and addressed the NATO
    Battle Group in Romania, which comprises around 1,000 French, Dutch, Belgian
    and Luxemburgish troops and is spearheaded by France.




    WIND POWER On Tuesday, Romania had over 40% of its electricity
    demand covered from wind power sources, as the National Meteorology
    Administration issued a code yellow alert for strong winds in the south and south-east,
    where most of the country’s wind farms are located. According to the National
    Energy Regulatory Authority, wind farms have a total installed capacity of over
    3,000 MW, and most turbines were in operation on Tuesday. The second most important
    electricity source is nuclear power, followed by hydro power and coal.


    EPP The leaders of the
    European People’s Party (EPP), the largest group in the European Parliament,
    have decided that the National Liberal Party, a member of the ruling coalition
    in Romania, will host the EPP congress ahead of the European elections in 2024. Attending
    the event in Bucharest will be over 2,000 delegates from over 40 countries, including
    all the heads of state and government from EPP member parties, the EC president,
    Ursula von der Leyen, the European Parliament president, Roberta Metsola, and
    all the European commissioners affiliated to the EPP.




    FOOTBALL Romania’s national football team is preparing the home matches
    against Israel, scheduled on Saturday, September 9, and Kosovo, on Tuesday,
    September 12, in Group I of the qualifiers for next year’s European
    Championships hosted by Germany. After 4 group matches, with 2 wins and 2
    draws, Romania has 8 points and ranks 2, after Switzerland (10 points). The
    group also includes Belarus and Andorra. The top 2 teams in each group qualify
    for the final tournament. Romania’s last participation in a European football
    championship was in 2016, and it last qualified in a World Championship final
    tournament in 1998. (AMP)

  • Romania’s 10-year plan on energy and climate

    Romania’s 10-year plan on energy and climate

    The European Commission has recently sent to Bucharest
    an analysis of Romania’s National Plan on Energy and Climate Change, 2021-2030.
    The analysis has identified several flaws, while the Commission has offered recommendations
    to that end. Romania’s plan, which has come under close scrutiny as of late,
    defines the way Romania will take action in the next decade, especially in the
    field of energy, against the backdrop of a global climate crisis. Having
    examined several chapters, the Brussels officials criticized the authors’ lack
    of ambition, since the set targets they have come up with were below the standards recommended by the
    European Union, even though those standards were a little bit higher as
    compared with the standards set in the previous reports. Accordingly, as
    regards renewable energy, the Commission has found out Romania continued to
    maintain a low-level set target, standing at 3.7%, although the country’s
    potential was bigger than that. Estimates have revealed that by 2030, Romania
    could have reached a renewable energy level standing at 34%. Even if the plan
    details the measures targeting the increased importance of green energy in the
    fields of electricity, heating and transport, the European experts have pointed
    to the fact that there was no clear-cut quantification of that.


    Greenpeace Romania
    climate and energy campaign coordinator, Vlad Catuna:


    ”Romania’s strategy in the field of
    energy and climate basically focuses on fossil fuels and nuclear energy,
    instead of focusing on green renewable sources of energy, given that Romania,
    Europe and the whole world are facing the effects of climate change. And when I
    say the effects of climate change, it is not only the melting of glaciers or
    the rise of ocean water level that I have in mind, but what I do have in mind
    are the effects we are beginning to feel also here, in Romania. And at that,
    what we have in mind are the dried-up lakes of Nuntasi and Iezer or southern
    Oltenia, where desertification is in full swing, if we take into account that
    we had to cope with storms and heavy downpours in the summer, or the drought we
    also had to cope with. For Romania, this year was one of the droughtiest ever
    to have been reported for this country. Against this backdrop, where we have to
    cope with such effects, Romania must come up with an ambitious plan, where
    green energy should be prioritized at the expense of dirty energy. In effect,
    when coal is still mentioned in Romania’s part of the energy mix, or when we
    come up with projects prioritizing natural gas extraction in the Black Sea,
    that means we have a very serious problem.”


    The transition to green energy is not an easy process,
    nor is it a cheap one. Everybody knows ecology is expensive and proof of that
    is the price of the bio products on display on shelves in specialized shops.
    Romania’s great advantage is that the European Union finances these
    transformations, moreover, Romania has a good potential, mainly because of its
    geographic position.

    Vlad Catuna:


    We have a tremendous potential
    in terms of wind power, mention is being made of the offshore renewable energy
    potential of the Black Sea, and we can also speak about a tremendous solar
    energy potential in the southern part of the country. You’re quite right when
    you say: yes, we need money and the good thing is that the European Commission,
    through its European Green Deal, offers Romania large sums of money for this
    kind of energy transition. We want it to be one from fossil fuels straight to
    the green energy. It will be very expensive and very difficult for us to go
    through an intermediary transition, through a kind of transition, where
    initially, we rely on gas instead of passing straight to renewable green
    energies. And that, because we ‘ve got time on our hands, we have the necessary
    resources, we have financing from the European Commission and we have the
    potential proper to implement such an energy transition.


    With respect to another chapter, that of energy
    efficiency, the European Commission has found out Romania has enhanced its
    level of ambition regarding the national contribution to the 2030 community
    objective, as compared to the plan project, with is most welcome. However, the
    contributions to the primary energy consumption and the final energy
    consumption are not at all ambitious. As for the positive side, the final plan
    includes useful info on buildings, pointing to the intention of going beyond a
    renovation rate standing at 3 or 4%. However, according to the European
    officials, Romania has not as yet come up with a long-term renovation strategy.
    The Commission also mentioned the fact that it encouraged measures regarding
    the energy efficiency of the heating networks. Eventually, the plan does not
    offer sufficient info on the quality of air and the interaction between the
    quality of air and the atmospheric emissions policy. Yet there are also
    examples of good practices, mainly due to the fact that the document includes
    elements of the European Green Deal for agriculture, mainly through the
    promotion of ecological farming and the limited use of fertilizers. Greenpeace
    Romania climate and energy campaign coordinator, Vlad Catuna, sounded upbeat
    about all that, stating things will no longer be as they are at present,
    because the new European Climate Law will come up with much more ambitious set
    targets. Once implemented, the law will compel the Romanian authorities to step
    up the energy transition process, to renounce coal and gas and invest in green
    energy.


    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)






    —–



  • How green is wind power?

    How green is wind power?

    Romania is in the front ranks of renewable energy as far as EU energy policies are concerned. The 2020 goal has already been achieved, namely that 24% of the gross energy consumption should be covered by renewable sources. To this end, wind power has played an important role, despite being introduced rather late in Romania. Most production facilities have been put in place in the last 10 years. However, the growth rate of the wind power sector has been quite fast; at the moment, wind power accounts for around 12.3% of Romanias total electric power output.



    Most wind turbines were built in Dobrogea, a southeastern region bordered by the Danube and the Black Sea, a region with a big potential in terms of wind power. It is a region of a great diversity with a lot of protected areas, the best-known being the Danube Delta Biosphere Reserve and the Macin Mountains National Park. That is one of the reasons why the new wind turbines have not been received with much enthusiasm in the region. Marina Druga from the Romanian Ornithological Society has more:



    At the moment, there are wind farms in Romania which are not OK. They overlap with the migration areas, priority habitats of community interest have been destroyed, even in Dobrogea. Romania is the only EU member country to boast such areas. Each project must be examined separately, because some projects are OK, but there are also projects that are not OK. And for that we need studies.



    There have been visible effects on the birds life, Marina Druga points out:



    Certain organizations have signaled the death of large raptors, such as the lesser spotted eagle. There have also been reports of people who were carrying out certain projects on the ground at the time, projects that had no connection with wind power, and who saw some species that had been killed by the wind turbines.



    However, environmental organizations have no statistical data about the entire negative impact of wind turbines on birds. The representatives of wind power producers challenge the effects. Catalina Dragomir, chair of the board of the Romanian Wind Energy Association told us more:



    For sure, the existing wind farms in operation are permanently monitored and I havent seen any report or any other document indicating their negative impact on the environment.



    How hazardous are the wind turbines as regards the birds migration corridors? Catalina Dragomir, a representative of the wind power producers shares her opinion:



    By definition, they are not hazardous. If there are problems or risks, those investments will not get environment endorsement. The investment in the respective area will cease or will be relocated. There are no other alternatives. There were projects which did not get endorsement, or did get endorsement, but with expensive monitoring measures and entailing a negative impact on the investment, so that the final decision was to pull the plug.



    Environmental organizations say they will monitor data on the wind farms more carefully, in order to have their own information and studies. Marina Druga from the Romanian Ornithological Society again:



    Most wind farms in Dobrogea developed over 2013-2014. At that time, we didnt have enough data. Meanwhile, a project has been carried out regarding the collection of data, which is currently submitted to the European Commission. You should understand that the Romanian Ornithological Society has never stood against the development of wind energy. But it should be done based on a strategy, on studies, in areas where wind turbines dont have a negative impact on the species of birds, habitats, or bats.



    Catalina Dragomir, chair of the board of the Romanian Wind Energy Association claims that the environmental impact assessments allowing for the development of wind power in Romania are quite sound:



    The development of investment in renewable energy is based on comprehensive research conducted by relevant authorities; the environmental impact assessment is instrumental to establishing whether a wind power project is feasible or not. All these investments are made with funds made available by local, national or international financial institutions. All this calls for utmost security in terms of guaranteeing future revenues to recover the investment. Stopping the investment for possible causes related to environmental assessments poses an additional risk to investors; that is why they carefully check the quality of those environmental assessments and examine any decision based on such studies. As early as the first development stage of a wind power project, you need environmental permits, environmental reports provided by competent companies in the field, endorsement which is subsequently confirmed by the Environment Agency and which indicates possible additional environmental protection or monitoring measures, either in the development stage or in the construction or operational stages. That means that after becoming operational, a wind farm is permanently monitored by relevant companies and the reports are regularly submitted to relevant agencies that assess the wind farms impact and identify possible risks or problems.



    The EUs ambitious goals with respect to the production of energy from renewable sources do not justify their effects on nature. Such effects must be carefully monitored and kept in check as much as possible in order to achieve green energy technologies.


    (Translated by A.M. Palcu)