Amasra Bartın power station

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Amasra Bartın power station (Bartın (Batı Karadeniz) Termik Santrali) is a cancelled power station in Amasra, Bartın, Türkiye.

Location

Table 1: Project-level location details

Plant name Location Coordinates (WGS 84)
Amasra Bartın power station Amasra, Bartın, Türkiye 41.72704, 32.34971 (approximate)

The map below shows the approximate location of the power station.

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Project Details

Table 2: Unit-level details

Unit name Status Fuel(s) Capacity (MW) Technology Start year Retired year
Unit 1 cancelled coal - bituminous 600 supercritical
Unit 2 cancelled coal - bituminous 600 supercritical

Table 3: Unit-level ownership and operator details

Unit name Owner
Unit 1 Bati Karadeniz Elektrik Üretim AŞ [100.0%]
Unit 2 Bati Karadeniz Elektrik Üretim AŞ [100.0%]

Background

The coal-fired Amasra Bartın power station has been proposed by Bati Karadeniz Elektrik Üretim A.Ş., a subsidiary of the diversified Turkish company Hattat Holding. Different iterations of the project have been proposed by different companies, all of which are however subsidiaries of Hattat Holding: "Amasra power station", "Bartın power station," "Hema integrated power station," and "Western Black Sea (Batı Karadeniz) integrated power station." Turkish MP Muhammet Rıza Yalçınkaya, a prominent critic of the project, has demanded clarity from Hattat on which proposal it was actually pursuing.[1]

According to CAN Europe, licenses are being pursued for the 1,100 MW HEMA Amasra power station and 1,200 MW Amasra Bartın power station.[2]

Since the proposal Hattat Holding has been having problems securing financing. The project's EIA has since been cancelled and the proposal does not appear on Turkey's EMRA license/permit lists as of June 2017.[3]

As of June 2019 there has been no further progress and the project appears to be cancelled.

Opposition to Amasra Bartın power station

Residents of Bartın protest against the proposed Amasra Bartın power station in 2010.[4]

The proposal to build the Amasra Bartın plant and HEMA plant has faced significant public opposition, both in Amasra and in the provincial capital of Bartın, mainly on the grounds that pollution from the plant would hurt tourism and damage the local environment. Protests have been led by the Bartın Platform, created in April 2010, which has coordinated amongst many stakeholders in the region that are opposed to the plant. 10,000 residents of Bartın held a protest against the plant in April 2010, and later that year a petition against the plant collected 30,000 signatures. Public permitting meetings have also been disrupted by local residents.[5]

In July 2013, Muhammet Rıza Yalçınkaya, an MP from the opposition Republican People's Party, called on the Ministry of Environment & Urban Planning to reject the projects.[6]

On June 5, 2014, local residents in Bartin’s Amasra district in Turkey formed a human chain to oppose the Amasra Bartin coal plant construction. Citing possible damages to the Küre Mountains National Park and the fishing agriculture, locals and fisherman joined in protesting the plant. In the crowd, locals asked, “what will you leave your grandchildren” if the coal plant destroys nature?[7]

In December 2017, company workers destroyed 180 olive trees in an attempt to circumvent a law that prohibits coal plants within a 3 km radius of olive groves traditionally used by local populations. The workers responded that the “company had obtained the land that the trees long stood on.” The villagers called for the stop to the “tree massacre.”[8] The following day, Directorate of Agriculture officials took record of the cut trees and told the Head of the Village (Muhtar) that they would fine the company, as cutting down trees without obtaining permits is unlawful.[9]

Multiple Turkish cities and towns had made applications for information about coal plant projects and their environmental impact, including the Amasra Bartin plant. It was reported that the environmental impact assessments (EIA) for the Amasra plant was terminated as a result of Environmental Law No. 2872.[10]

On May 10, 2019, it was reported that hundreds of Amasra locals protested and opposed thermal coal power plants in the area.[11]

In June 2020, 13 lawsuits were reported to be filed against the Amasra Bartin coal plant along with 5 EIA applications.[12] The group, Bartin Platform, met with the Minister of Environment and Urbanization, Murat Kurum, to cancel the EIA process for the Amasra plant, claiming that it is illegal to “enable the process of the thermal plant.”[13]

Articles and Resources

References

  1. Yalçınkaya: İsim karışıklığı giderilmeli, Bartin.info, July 18, 2013.
  2. Communication with CAN Europe, Nov 2015
  3. "Environmental Inventory: EIA decisions," Ministry of Environment and Urbanization, updated May 6, 2017
  4. Pearl of the Black Sea Coast Faces Threat from ‘Black Diamonds’, Today's Zaman, Apr. 8, 2012.
  5. Public Outcry in District of Amasra of Bartin Province on Black Sea Coast of Turkey, Energy News Turkey, Nov. 25, 2010.
  6. Yalçınkaya, Termik Santral Projesinin İptal Edilmesinin İstedi, Haberler, July 18, 2013.
  7. “Amasra Residents Protest Coal on Land, Sea”, BIA News Desk-Istanbul, June 6, 2014.
  8. “It’s been 12 years, 180 trees, and Amasra will not yield.”, 350.org, Translated by Google, December 28, 2017.
  9. Eduardo Santaela, "It’s been 12 years, 180 trees, and Amasra will not yield," 350.org, December 28, 2017
  10. “Response to 56 Applications to Obtain Information from MoEU”, Ecology Collective, Translated by Google, April 9, 2018.
  11. “Facebook Post”, Bartin Platform, Translated by Google, May 10, 2019.
  12. “Bartinians once again won”, Yesil Gazete, Translated by Google, June 19, 2020.
  13. “Call from the Platform to the Institution ‘Complete the EIA process completely’”, Bartin Hergün Gazetesi, Translated by Google, June 30, 2020.

Additional data

To access additional data, including an interactive map of coal-fired power stations, a downloadable dataset, and summary data, please visit the Global Coal Plant Tracker on the Global Energy Monitor website.