Gerze power station
This article is part of the Coal Issues portal on SourceWatch, a project of Global Energy Monitor and the Center for Media and Democracy. See here for help on adding material to CoalSwarm. |
This article is part of the CoalSwarm coverage of Turkey and coal. | |
Sub-articles: | |
Funding | |
Gerze power station is a proposed 1,200-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant in Sinop province, Turkey.
Contents
Location
The undated satellite photo below shows the plant's site, which is near Yaykıl village, Gerze district, Sinop province.
Background on Plant
This two-unit, 1,200-MW coal-fired power plant was proposed by the Anadolu Group.[1] The project received initial permits in November 2008.[2]
The plant proposed for the Black Sea coast was the center of repeated protest. In March 2010, residents of village of Yaylik prevented a public meeting organized by plant's sponsor, the Anadolu Group, forcing workers to leave their village. The villagers subsequently posted a guard to prevent drilling teams from working in the village. In September 2011, three buses of gendarmerie officers used tear gas and truncheons against the protesting villagers, injuring four people and igniting a nearby forest. Comert Uygar Erdem, a lawyer representing the residents, said that the company lacked a license from the Ministry of Environment, that the Assessment of Environmental Impact had not been completed, and that the project was proceeding due solely to the governor's permission. Erdem asserted out that due to Roman and early Byzantine archeological findings the plant location should be declared a historically protected area.[3]
In November 2011 ten thousand people from various provinces and districts of Turkey gathered in the town of Gerze to protest the construction of the plant. The demonstration was organized by the Platform for a Green Gerze (YEGEP) and attended by members of the Green Party, the Ecology Collective, Greenpeace and others. The demonstration was carried out and brought to an end peacefully. The protestors chanted slogans like "Gerze does not want coal" and "The people of Gerze do not stand alone".Additionally, Greenpeace launched an internet signature campaign in 2011 against the coal-run thermal power plant, which gathered over 37,000 supporters.[4]
In August 2013 the Ministry of Environment and Urbanization rejected the Environmental Impact Assesment report for the plant for the fourth time, saying the proposed plant was within a forest area and that the proposal should be redrafted to stay outside forest areas. Environmental groups said the area is covered in forest, which would make a new proposal infeasible.[5]
Gerze mayor Osman Belovacikli supported the resistance against the plant, and said he has taken an initiative to bring wind energy technology to Gerze.[6]
Project Details
- Sponsor: Gerze Enerji Santrali
- Parent company: Anadolu Group
- Location: Yaykıl village, Gerze district, Sinop province, Turkey
- Coordinates: 41.86621, 35.12424 (exact)
- Status: Cancelled
- Gross capacity: 1,200 MW
- Type: Supercritical[1]
- Projected in service: TBD
- Coal type: Bituminous[7]
- Coal source: Imported[1]
- Source of financing:
Articles and resources
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Gerze Enerji Santrali Teknik Özellikleri, Gerze Enerji Santrali website, accessed Apr. 2014.
- ↑ Gerze Enerji Santrali, Kara Atlas, accessed Apr. 2014.
- ↑ "Police attacked villagers after protesting thermal plant," Bianet, September 6, 2011
- ↑ "Resistance against Coal-Fired Plant in Gerze" Bianet, November 28, 2011.
- ↑ "A Win with a big 'W'" 350.org, Sep 3, 2013.
- ↑ Yonca Poyraz Dogan, "Black Sea jewel town threatened by coal plant, daunted locals resist," Today's Zaman, April 1, 2012.
- ↑ Anadolu Group, "Gerze Thermal Power Plant", Anadolu Group website, accessed September 2013.
Related SourceWatch articles
External resources
- Chris Walker and Morgan Hartley, "Special report Coal and Corruption: The Battle for Gerze", The Ecologist, August 17th, 2012.