Bulgaria wants another 2.6 GW of renewables by 2030 – and coal

The government’s energy strategy targets new clean energy capacity this decade but all existing coal power plants will also remain active, gas pipelines could be upgraded and new nuclear facilities deployed.

September 16, 2020 Emiliano Bellini

The parliament will discuss a draft energy strategy before it enters law.

Image: sapviktor/Pixabay

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Bulgaria is targeting 2,645 MW of new renewable energy generation capacity this decade, according to a draft version of the country's Strategy for Sustainable Energy Development until 2030 with a horizon until 2050 , published on the national parliament's website.

The new capacity would include around 2.3 GW of solar and wind projects, which Sofia said should be deployed on a market basis. No details were offered about how such volumes would be commissioned and in which market segments.

The strategy also envisages the nation's coal power plants will remain active beyond 2030 and includes the possibility of new nuclear capacity and upgraded gas interconnection with neighboring countries.

The draft document will be discussed by the Bulgarian cabinet and parliament before adoption.

Non-hydropower renewables make up around 2.3 GW of Bulgaria's 12.6 GW power generation fleet, with lignite and hard coal-fired power stations supplying 4.5 GW, hydro 3.2 GW, nuclear 2 GW and natural gas 600 MW. The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) estimates solar accounted for 1,065 MW of that clean energy capacity at the end of last year, with only 32 MW of new projects added in 2019. Irena said only 53 MW of new solar capacity has been added in Bulgaria in the last seven years, because of a lack of incentives.

Last year's 32 MW presaged an uptick in new large scale solar facilities, with plans for a 400 MW solar park in the Haskovo municipality of southern Bulgaria unveiled late last month. That project is expected to sell clean power under a private power supply deal. A 180 MW solar project is also being developed in the town of Devnya, in the Varna province of northeastern Bulgaria.

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