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Polish coal demand likely to fall by 7.0m tonnes next year

Monday, 7 September 2020


WARSAW, Sept 06 (Reuters): Poland's demand for coal is expected to fall by around 7.0 million tonnes next year, or more than 10 per cent of annual hard coal production, after a drop in demand for electricity, Deputy Minister of State Assets Artur Sobon said on Friday.
Poland generates most of its electricity from burning coal, which has become costly due to rising prices of carbon emission permits. The industry has also struggled with falling demand for coal, which accelerated during the COVID-19 lockdown because the country used less power.
"The situation in coal mining is not easy ... We have a fall in electricity production and a fall in production of electricity from coal. We should expect that this is a sustained trend," Sobon said during a discussion panel on energy transformation during the European Economic Congress in Katowice, the heart of Poland's coal region.
He said data provided by power stations showed that next year demand for coal would likely shrink by around 7.0 million tonnes.
Speaking at the same panel, Tomasz Rogala, chief executive at Poland's biggest coal producer, state-run PGG, said the group had to adjust its output to the demand from Polish utilities, as it would not find new markets for its products.