06 May 2020

Portugal hits record 52 days without coal electricity

LISBON, 6 May 2020 – Portugal has joined the UK in smashing records for days without coal power this year, with its Pego power plant suspending power production on 14 March. This follows Portugal’s other, much larger plant, Sines, halting operations 48 days earlier on 26 January, improving a run of cleaner air for the country that began 100 days ago. 

Reduced economic activity due to COVID-19 has contributed to lowered electricity demand across Europe, but in Portugal the growth of renewable energy and the costs associated with CO2 emissions were already pushing coal out before the pandemic. In the last two months alone renewable electricity production grew by 14.5 percent compared to the same period in 2019 – up from 63 percent to 77 percent of the national total. 

“Portugal has been a leader on the transition to renewable energy, and this record of 52 days without coal shows that a cleaner, healthier future is there for us if we choose it,” said Francisco Ferreira, president of the Portuguese environmental organisation ZERO. “We were already expecting 2021 and 2023 as the closure dates for Portugal’s two coal plants, but as we are on track to go beyond even this 52 day record, it is very likely that we can move beyond coal even sooner than anticipated, without jeopardising security of supply.”

“While the reasons for the current decline in pollution are unwanted and tragic, people across Europe are seeing the benefits of cleaner air and water that come with reductions in fossil fuel burning. We can – and must – make better decisions about energy sources, and Portugal is demonstrating that renewables can replace coal,” said Kathrin Gutmann, Europe Beyond Coal campaign director. “Our leaders are increasingly getting behind a Green New Deal for Europe. The job ahead of us is to build a thriving, resilient economy that builds on a renewables-based power sector and that can work for everyone.”

When Pego and Sines do close, Portugal will join Belgium, Sweden, and Austria in completely eliminating coal in electricity production since the UN Paris Climate Agreement was signed. Six more countries are expected to follow suit and eliminate coal for electricity production by 2025 or earlier, including France (2022), Slovakia (2023), Portugal (2023), the UK (2024), Ireland (2025) and Italy (2025); and five more by 2030 or earlier, which is the necessary end date for coal generation in Europe for the continent to be in line with the UN Paris climate agreement. This includes Greece (2028), the Netherlands (2029), Finland (2029), Hungary (2030), and Denmark (2030). Germany intends to exit coal by 2038, according to its yet-to-be adopted coal exit law – too late to honour its commitments under the UN Paris climate agreement.

ENDS

 

Contacts:

Alastair Clewer, Communications Officer, Europe Beyond Coal
[email protected], +49 176 433 07 185

Kathrin Gutmann, Campaign Director, Europe Beyond Coal,
[email protected], +49 1577 8363 036

Francisco Ferreira, President of the Board, ZERO – Association for the Sustainability of the Earth System
[email protected], +351-969078564

 

Notes:

  1. ZERO estimates that average daily CO2 emissions from electricity production decreased from 28 thousand tonnes per day in March and April 2019, to 12 thousand tonnes per day in the same period in 2020. https://zero.ong/quase-um-milhao-de-toneladas-de-co2-de-reducao-de-emissoes-na-producao-de-eletricidade-nos-ultimos-dois-meses/
  2. More details on Europe’s coal phase out can be found in Europe Beyond Coal’s Coal Exit Tracker: https://beyond-coal.eu/coal-exit-tracker/
  3. 13 countries in Europe have yet to declare a coal exit, namely Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Kosovo, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovenia and Turkey. Discussions are currently underway in the Czech Republic, Spain and North Macedonia over when to exit coal.

 

About: 

Europe Beyond Coal is an alliance of civil society groups working to catalyse the closures of coal mines and power plants, prevent the building of any new coal projects and hasten the just transition to clean, renewable energy and energy efficiency. Our groups are devoting their time, energy and resources to this independent campaign to make Europe coal free by 2030 or sooner. www.beyond-coal.eu

Read also
BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

19 March 2025

EU policymakers must galvanise a shift away from coal-based steelmaking to boost industrial competitiveness and guarantee a future for over two million workers, according to a research launched today and endorsed by 28 civil society organisations.(1)(2) The research titled “The State of the European Steel Transition” (This link will be live on March 19) highlights that the industry is at a crossroads but that “there is a clear pathway to green steel” and this year is critical for advancing policies to drive the EU steel industry’s transition. 

BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

19 March 2025

The European steel industry stands at a pivotal crossroads. As one of the most emissions-intensive sectors, responsible for 5% of the European Union’s (EU) total emissions and over a quarter of industrial emissions, its transformation is essential to achieving the EU’s ambitious climate goals. The steel sector must undergo rapid decarbonisation, shifting away from polluting coal-based production towards clean, near-zero emissions alternatives. This transition is not only an environmental imperative but also an opportunity to secure the industry’s long-term competitiveness, ensure job security, and reinforce Europe’s industrial leadership in a changing global market.

BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

25 February 2025

Renewable energy comes in all sizes and shapes, from small-scale solar panels on rooftops to massive wind farms offshore. The beauty of renewables lies in their versatility and adaptability, allowing solutions to be tailored to meet the unique needs and priorities of each community. This diversity opens the door to creating a fair, clean, and prosperous energy future. Benefit sharing mechanisms are at the heart of this transformation. They ensure that renewable energy projects don’t just “land” in communities but actively involve and benefit them. When done right—not as a greenwashing exercise but through meaningful engagement and participation—benefit sharing creates win-win outcomes for developers and communities alike while advancing climate goals.

BLOG
REPORT
BRIEFING
PRESS RELEASE
INFOGRAPHIC

12 February 2025

A new investigation by NGO groups Beyond Fossil Fuels and Re-set suggests that promises by major European power company EPH that it will move away from coal by 2030 are not necessarily to be taken at face value.