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THE PITS
Hard economic lessons as China's coal boom ends
By Tom HANCOCK
Datong, China (AFP) Dec 9, 2015


Greenpeace activists arrested after Greek power plant stunt
Athens (AFP) Dec 9, 2015 - Greenpeace on Wednesday said 10 of its activists were arrested after scaling a tower at Greece's largest coal power plant to demand a switch to renewable energy.

The activists climbed a cooling tower at the Agios Dimitrios plant in Kozani, northern Greece, that belongs to Public Power Corporation (PPC), the country's main electricity provider.

They spent 14 hours on the tower at a height of 130 metres (425 feet) and painted "Go Solar" on its side before police arrested them.

"We chose the largest and most polluting lignite station in the country, responsible for nearly 15 percent of national carbon dioxide emissions," said Takis Grigoriou, energy supervisor for Greece at Greenpeace.

"We ask the PPC to change, to make dirty lignite a thing of the past, where it belongs, and look to the future, to the sun," he said.

The group said the operation was part of a worldwide mobilisation as representatives of nearly 200 nations try to reach a deal to curb global warming at a UN conference in Paris.

Greece is trying to meet a renewable energy quota -- 20 percent of national electricity production -- by the end of the decade and has pledged to boost solar and wind power generation.

Yet around half of the country's electricity production still comes from coal-fired plants, and PPC is Greece's single largest offender in carbon dioxide emissions.

Citing EU environmental agency statistics, Greenpeace said the use of lignite, a form of brown coal, had burdened Greece with between 5.8 and 19 billion euros ($20 billion) in environmental and health costs between 2008 and 2012.

On Wednesday, the organisation said it had sent the government a 10-year plan to encourage solar energy use in households.

"To meet the target of a temperature rise of no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius... we need 100 percent renewable energy by 2050 globally," Grigoriou said.

Coated in thick black dust, hundreds of miners emerge after another shift gouging out the coal that fuelled China's boom and its choking pollution -- an industry now crippled by oversupply, but whose companies are seen as too big to fail.

The Tongmei Group they work for deep underground is typical of the lumbering and inefficient state-owned firms that dominate cities in China's industrial heartlands.

The firm is the lifeblood of Datong, a city of three million people. It employs some 200,000 staff with nearly a million family dependents, housing and entertaining its workers and even running hospitals.

And it is in trouble.

For decades coal has been the backbone of the northern province of Shanxi, providing livelihoods for millions of miners, while private jet owning bosses became notorious for their nouveau riche lifestyles.

China's consumption of the fuel doubled in the decade to 2014 as the economy soared, reaching more than four billion tonnes a year.

That exacerbated a chronic and dangerous smog problem -- Beijing declared its first "red alert" for pollution this week -- and made China the world's biggest emitter of greenhouses gasses, putting it at the centre of crunch climate change talks under way in Paris.

Now some observers say China's coal demand may have peaked -- a confluence of economic growth slowing to its lowest rate in 25 years and Beijing starting to reduce the carbon-dioxide-spewing fuel's share of the national energy mix.

That has dragged coal prices down to their lowest level in a decade, putting the squeeze on Tongmei.

But manager Liu Congying says despite the shrinking market, he has little choice but to supply even more -- the mine operates 24 hours a day with a maximum output of 6,000 tonnes an hour.

"If we didn't increase production, we could not continue to run the business as we do now... including paying wages," said Liu.

"It's clearly not a sustainable policy".

- Social stability -

Relatively poor Shanxi's population is nearly 40 million -- more than Canada's -- and official statistics show its GDP grew just 2.8 percent this year.

Many of China's giant state-owned enterprises (SOEs) are unviable and plagued by overcapacity, with reports in September saying a mining group in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang will sack 100,000 workers, in what analysts called a taste of the pain to come.

Liu -- who began toiling in the pits five decades ago -- denied that Tongmei planned layoffs, telling AFP: "We need to preserve social stability."

But the firm is "probably running out of money", said industry analyst Zhang Zhibin.

He and other industry insiders think that China's coal consumption has peaked and may even decline in the next few years.

That is a potential boon to China's attempts to reduce smog and cut greenhouse gas emissions, but a disaster for cities such as Datong.

"We will see bankruptcies in the sector in the next few years," Zhang added.

China's Premier Li Keqiang last week called for a "cut back on overcapacity in traditional industries as well as a large number of zombie enterprises", in remarks state-run media said were directed at coal and steel.

But there are few signs the government is willing to turn off the financial taps and risk widespread unemployment, with the potential for anger and unrest -- anathema to the Communist Party.

"The state sector is inefficient and wasteful," said Joe Zhang, an SOE manager turned commentator. "But it has a central role in the Chinese social fabric."

- Golden carp -

In his company-funded flat -- equipped with central heating and an aquarium for golden carp -- a miner surnamed Xu said: "Our homes are much better than before."

His daughter played in front of a flat-screen television.

Xu's pay rose nearly tenfold in the good years after the late 1990s to peak around 6,000 yuan ($930) per month, but this year he has seen a 15 percent cut.

Shanxi officials are trying to diversify by boosting tourism and luring manufacturers away from China's coast.

Meanwhile, Tongmei is moving into electricity and chemical production.

Even so the buzzcut 38-year-old scoffed at the idea that service industries such as tourism could be his city's future.

"Who will we serve? If tens of thousands of us start up businesses, who will buy our products?" he asked.

"We have nothing here apart from coal."


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