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IEA urges Poland to curb reliance on coal
by Staff Writers
Warsaw (AFP) Jan 25, 2017


Bangladesh police fire tear gas at anti-coal protest
Dhaka (AFP) Jan 26, 2017 - Clashes erupted in Bangladesh's capital Thursday as police fired tear gas at hundreds of campaigners protesting against a massive coal-fired power plant they say will destroy the world's largest mangrove forest.

Witnesses said Shahbagh Square, Dhaka's main protest venue, turned into a battleground as police used water cannon and fired tear gas and rubber bullets at hundreds of left-wing and environmental protesters.

"There were some 200 protesters. We fired tear gas at them after they threw bricks at us. We also used water cannon," Maruf Hossain Sorder, deputy commissioner of Dhaka Metropolitan Police, told AFP.

Local television stations and an AFP correspondent at the scene said police also fired rubber bullets at the protesters. At least four people were injured, according to private Jamuna Television.

Campaigners have been protesting for the last three years against the under-construction plant which is 14 kilometres (nine miles) north of Sundarbans forest, part of which is a UNESCO world heritage site.

Experts from both Bangladesh and India -- part of the forest also lies in eastern India -- say the project could critically damage the unique forest, which is home to endangered Bengal tigers and Irrawaddy dolphins.

In November, more than 20,000 people joined a similar protest against the 1,320 megawatt plant after UNESCO urged Bangladesh to halt construction of the plant.

UNESCO said there was a high chance pollution from the plant would "irreversibly damage" the Sundarbans which acts as a barrier against storm surges and cyclones that have killed thousands in impoverished coastal villages.

Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has defended the project and rejected concerns about it as politically motivated. She said the plant was needed to provide power to the impoverished south.

The website of the mass circulation Bengali daily Prothom Alo said protest marches were also held in other key areas in the capital although there were no reports of any violence.

Poland should rethink its dependence on heavily polluting coal and focus instead on developing cleaner energy sources, the International Energy Agency said Wednesday.

"The new energy strategy must determine if coal is going to sustain the Polish economy over the longer term or if it is to be a burden for the country," the IEA said in its 2016 review of the country's energy sector.

The agency reported that coal accounted for 81 percent of Poland's electricity generation in 2015 and that the heavily indebted coal-mining sector -- one of Europe's largest -- provided more than 100,000 politically sensitive jobs.

The right-wing government of Beata Szydlo plans to present a revised energy strategy this year, but the coal-miner's-daughter-turned-prime minister has long insisted that plentiful domestic coal is key to Poland's energy security.

Her Law and Justice (PiS) administration has also set tough regulations on the installation of wind turbines, in effect blocking competition from the renewables sector, which in 2014 covered about 10 percent of national energy needs.

The IEA said "the future of renewable energy in Poland looks uncertain" in light of this and other legislative moves by the PiS.

The agency commended the government's efforts to replace antiquated coal-fired electricity and heating plants with more efficient and cleaner units.

But it cautioned that significant policy support was needed to reach Warsaw's "very ambitious goal" of having one million electric vehicles on the roads by 2025.

Poland's energy strategy "will require significant investments to reduce the share of carbon-intensive power plants and increase the share of low-carbon energy, including nuclear energy and renewables", IEA director Fatih Birol said in Warsaw.

The agency also noted that "air pollution is one of the largest environmental health risks" facing Poles.

A study last year by the European Environmental Agency blamed air pollution -- caused in large part by the burning of coal -- for an estimated 50,000 premature deaths a year in the country of 38 million people.

Poland plans to ban the use of low-quality coal -- an important but costly measure in a country where coal is used to heat 72 percent of single family dwellings.

Lawmakers in the Krakow region of Poland, considered the area with the dirtiest air in the country, also on Monday approved an anti-smog plan that calls for replacing the most polluting heating stoves by 2023.


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