Bulgaria
Economy
Bulgaria to Resume Power Exports After Miners Strike Ends
Bulgaria to Resume Power Exports After Miners Strike Ends
Bulgaria will resume power exports to south-east European countries tonight after the end of a coal miners strike that forced a halt to electricity exports.
Bulgaria will resume electricity exports from 1 a.m. on Jan. 28 after they were stopped to ensure domestic consumption on Jan. 21. Continuation of exports was possible only after coal reserves were replenished at the country’s power plants, the ministry said. Miners at Bulgaria’s Maritsa East mining region, which produces 90 percent of the country’s coal, ended an 8-day strike on Jan. 22 after agreeing to bonus payments.
Bulgaria sells electricity to other Balkan countries including Greece, Serbia, Romania, Albania and Macedonia, where a drought reduced power output from hydro plants. The country ships around 800 megawatts of power a day, according to the Electricity System Operator in Sofia. Bulgaria sold a record 10 billion kilowatt hours last year, a 30 percent increase on 2010, operator said.
The Maritsa East mines service three power plants, including AES Galabovo AD, run by AES Corp. and the state-run Maritsa East-2, ContourGlobal Maritsa East-3, which produce 25 percent of the country’s electricity output, according to their website.
The country also relies on the Kozloduy nuclear power plant, which produces about 40 percent of Bulgaria’s electricity output.
(source: www.businessweek.com)
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