Wednesday 6 May 2020

Austria and Sweden are free of coal-fired power plants

Source: RenewEconomy

In April this year, Austria and then Sweden closed down their last coal-fired power plants. Sweden reached the target two years earlier than planned. They are the second and third countries to go coal-free in Europe, Belgium did so in 2016. 

Six more European countries are expected to follow suit by 2025 or earlier. They are France in 2022; Slovakia and Portugal in 2023; the UK in 2024 and Ireland and Italy in 2025. Five more countries are scheduled to join them by 2030, which is the necessary date for Europe to meets its UN Paris agreement. They are Greece in 2028; the Netherlands and Finland in 2029 and Hungary and Denmark in 2030. Discussions are underway for other European countries to join them. 

Read more: 
- Sweden exits coal two years ahead of schedule, Austria closes last coal plant. RenewEconomy, April 24, 2020. 
- Sweden follows hot on Austria’s heels to go coal free. Europe Beyond Coal, April 21, 2020. 
- Austria ends coal era and commits to more renewable energy. Bloomberg, April 17, 2020.
- Belgium says goodbye to coal power use. Climate Action Network Europe, April 6, 2016.

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