Zürcher Nachrichten - In Bosnia, the path to renewables runs through its coal mines

EUR -
AED 4.172469
AFN 82.254285
ALL 99.443091
AMD 442.669245
ANG 2.033568
AOA 1042.821867
ARS 1220.13733
AUD 1.80657
AWG 2.044748
AZN 1.935661
BAM 1.955664
BBD 2.288841
BDT 137.74043
BGN 1.961167
BHD 0.42777
BIF 3370.065862
BMD 1.135971
BND 1.496896
BOB 7.833456
BRL 6.659749
BSD 1.133621
BTN 97.596219
BWP 15.810902
BYN 3.709842
BYR 22265.033118
BZD 2.277042
CAD 1.575536
CDF 3265.353315
CHF 0.926352
CLF 0.02877
CLP 1119.192243
CNY 8.283619
CNH 8.27647
COP 4910.258856
CRC 581.659589
CUC 1.135971
CUP 30.103234
CVE 110.25734
CZK 25.124845
DJF 201.665989
DKK 7.469696
DOP 70.015136
DZD 149.546094
EGP 58.259952
ERN 17.039566
ETB 147.302266
FJD 2.589451
FKP 0.870523
GBP 0.868347
GEL 3.135724
GGP 0.870523
GHS 17.570779
GIP 0.870523
GMD 81.226307
GNF 9813.318212
GTQ 8.743393
GYD 237.163523
HKD 8.810422
HNL 29.369959
HRK 7.534333
HTG 148.329695
HUF 409.938323
IDR 19081.076584
ILS 4.222235
IMP 0.870523
INR 97.663012
IQD 1484.996829
IRR 47824.382762
ISK 145.295033
JEP 0.870523
JMD 179.687516
JOD 0.805522
JPY 163.035006
KES 146.799801
KGS 99.341107
KHR 4541.684463
KMF 499.263598
KPW 1022.294878
KRW 1614.4251
KWD 0.348107
KYD 0.944734
KZT 585.8193
LAK 24559.293723
LBP 101571.343247
LKR 338.136508
LRD 226.724248
LSL 21.868981
LTL 3.354228
LVL 0.687138
LYD 6.299562
MAD 10.546067
MDL 20.093604
MGA 5113.644725
MKD 61.530725
MMK 2385.0762
MNT 3994.555643
MOP 9.055971
MRU 44.687895
MUR 49.87338
MVR 17.498202
MWK 1965.663434
MXN 23.067966
MYR 5.023837
MZN 72.60034
NAD 21.868981
NGN 1814.225757
NIO 41.717102
NOK 12.117749
NPR 156.154151
NZD 1.949496
OMR 0.437393
PAB 1.133621
PEN 4.231206
PGK 4.684675
PHP 64.754939
PKR 317.835518
PLN 4.289579
PYG 9069.369898
QAR 4.133413
RON 4.979761
RSD 117.211857
RUB 94.489935
RWF 1633.886484
SAR 4.263339
SBD 9.490317
SCR 16.273869
SDG 682.154808
SEK 11.102759
SGD 1.499032
SHP 0.892695
SLE 25.877842
SLL 23820.746739
SOS 647.85499
SRD 42.083228
STD 23512.307787
SVC 9.919311
SYP 14769.561249
SZL 21.857481
THB 38.057346
TJS 12.316644
TMT 3.975899
TND 3.411763
TOP 2.660562
TRY 43.085154
TTD 7.708464
TWD 36.779567
TZS 3038.088926
UAH 46.92884
UGX 4165.710584
USD 1.135971
UYU 49.176583
UZS 14700.978637
VES 87.603875
VND 29259.775028
VUV 140.62449
WST 3.205325
XAF 655.91143
XAG 0.035181
XAU 0.000351
XCD 3.070019
XDR 0.815743
XOF 655.91143
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.657784
ZAR 21.729241
ZMK 10225.106937
ZMW 31.995777
ZWL 365.782223
  • RBGPF

    62.0100

    62.01

    +100%

  • BCE

    0.3800

    21.36

    +1.78%

  • BCC

    0.9800

    95.66

    +1.02%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    10.18

    -0.29%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    49.12

    +0.2%

  • JRI

    0.1450

    11.91

    +1.22%

  • NGG

    2.4700

    68.06

    +3.63%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    9.12

    -0.11%

  • CMSC

    -0.3500

    21.8

    -1.61%

  • CMSD

    -0.3000

    21.9

    -1.37%

  • RIO

    1.9900

    56.86

    +3.5%

  • VOD

    0.2800

    8.73

    +3.21%

  • BTI

    1.0200

    41.57

    +2.45%

  • GSK

    1.0400

    34.64

    +3%

  • BP

    0.3600

    26.59

    +1.35%

  • AZN

    1.4200

    66.29

    +2.14%

In Bosnia, the path to renewables runs through its coal mines
In Bosnia, the path to renewables runs through its coal mines / Photo: ELVIS BARUKCIC - AFP

In Bosnia, the path to renewables runs through its coal mines

At 250 metres underground, the dust is thick and oxygen is in short supply at the Mramor mine in northeastern Bosnia.

Text size:

The facility is the largest underground mine in the country and has long provided the fuel for the nearby Tuzla power station.

But its future -- like that of mines across the country -- is now all but settled, as the Balkan nation prepares to decarbonise the country by 2050.

Until then, mining continues to be done the old-fashioned way in Mramor -- with picks, shovels and dynamite, veteran digger and union representative Senad Sejdic, 52, told AFP.

The work is backbreaking but Sejdic remains hopeful that the anticipated arrival of a modern excavator will make reaching the seam's premium coal an easier task.

"It would allow us to increase the annual haul from 140,000 tonnes to nearly 400,000 and to work in better safety conditions," said Sejdic.

Beyond the economic stakes, Sejdic has as emotional investment: his father was killed in a mining accident in the same area in 1990 that left 180 dead.

Yet the bid to harvest more coal at this site goes against the prevailing current, as the world seeks cleaner energy sources to limit pollution and global climate change caused by carbon emissions.

Coal remains the biggest polluter in Bosnia, where it fuels power plants and homes, with the country burning through approximately 13 million tonnes a year.

"Approximately 3,300 people die prematurely each year in Bosnia due to exposure to air pollution," or nearly 10 percent of all deaths, according to a 2019 World Bank report.

The capital Sarajevo -- where thousands of homes are heated by coal -- was ranked as the most polluted city in the world on Tuesday by the air-quality data platform operated by Swiss company IQAir.

- Power exporter -

Despite its cost to public health, coal remains a lucrative industry in Bosnia.

The government estimates the country has around 2.6 billion tonnes of exploitable coal still underground.

Bosnia also remains the only net exporter of electricity in the Western Balkans.

Nearly 30 percent of its annual production of around 15,000 GWh is sent abroad, according to the national electricity distributor. This earned the country 430 million euros ($453 million) of revenue in 2023, the national statistics office said.

But, like other countries in the region, Bosnia has committed to fully decarbonising its energy sector in the next 25 years.

With the deadline inching closer, the challenge remains stark.

Thermal power plants produce between 55 and 70 percent of Bosnia's electricity at any given time, according to the statistics office.

Hydroelectric plants churn out most of the remaining power used in Bosnia, while just four percent of electricity comes from solar or wind.

"To replace the 2,300 MW produced by thermal power plants, 5,000 MW would be needed from wind turbines or more than 10,000 MW from solar" costing billions of euros in investment, according to Edhem Bicakcic, an energy expert and investor in renewables.

"We very much hope to have access to European funds to carry out this transition," Bicakcic added.

- 'An opportunity' -

To decarbonise the economy, a complex plan has been drawn up that will see the gradual phasing out of its carbon-intensive energy sources.

The public utility company Elektroprivreda BiH will shut two of the six production units on its two coal-powered plants by 2027, said the company's executive director Fahrudin Tanovic.

To continue using its other four blocks from 2028, the company intends to invest more than 170 million euros to install desulphurisation and denitrification systems at its power stations.

"But by 2027 we must in the short term accelerate coal production to ensure sufficient quantities of electricity before acquiring larger renewable energy sites," said Tanovic.

But some still question whether there is the political will to see through the transition process.

For Denis Zisko, an environmental activist with the association Aarhus Centar based in Bosnia, the country's leaders still "lack the political courage" to say openly that mines do not have a future in the country.

"The energy transition is not a problem, it is an opportunity for development," he told AFP.

He said the coal industry will suffer when the European Union introduces its carbon tax -- which is set to be applied gradually to exports from non-EU member Bosnia and across the region in 2026.

But shuttering Bosnia's coal mines and power plants is likely to come with painful costs.

In March, the closure of mining operations at the last functioning pit at the Zenica complex after 144 years left its 600 employees without an income.

To add to their woes, the employees' pensions and taxes had not been covered by the mine for years.

According to official figures, mines across Bosnia face similar dilemmas.

"I have been working in the mine for twenty years," one 47-year-old miner who did not want to give his name told AFP.

"But my contributions have only been paid for four years."

A.Weber--NZN