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Version 2 | Version 3 |
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E.On delays new coal-fired plant | E.On delays new coal-fired plant |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Controversial plans to build a new coal-fired power station at Kingsnorth in Kent have been put on hold for up to three years, energy firm E.On has said. | |
It said the scheme would be delayed to about 2016 because electricity demand had fallen during the global recession. | |
The site has been a high-profile target of environmental protests by groups which argue a new plant would increase carbon emissions and climate change. | |
Greenpeace said E.On's decision was "good news for the climate". | |
The plant, which has yet to receive government permission, would be the UK's first coal-fired power station to be built for 30 years. | |
'Diverse coalition' | 'Diverse coalition' |
An E.On spokesman said that the economic downturn had "pushed back the need for a new plant in the UK to around 2016 because of the reduction in demand for electricity". | |
The case for coal is now collapsing Kingsnorth campaigner Ben Stewart | |
He added: "As a group, we remain committed to the development of cleaner coal and carbon capture and storage (CCS), which we believe have a key role to play alongside renewables, gas and nuclear, in tackling the global threat of climate change, while ensuring affordability and security of energy supplies." | |
Andy Atkins, executive director of environmental campaign group Friends of the Earth, said the station would have "seriously undermined the UK's credibility on climate change". | |
He added: "The government must now show real leadership and say no to all new coal plants which aren't fitted with 100% carbon capture and storage from day one." | He added: "The government must now show real leadership and say no to all new coal plants which aren't fitted with 100% carbon capture and storage from day one." |
Despite the insistence of E.On that the decision was driven by the downturn, Oxfam's campaigns director Thomas Schultz-Jagow noted that it had come after "thousands of campaigners raised the alarm about this proposal". | |
He suggested "the plug has been pulled on this dangerous initiative". | |
Greenpeace executive director John Sauven told the Guardian the announcement was "extremely good news for the climate" and praised the "huge diverse coalition of people who have campaigned against Kingsnorth". | |
E.On wants to replace the current Kingsnorth plant, due to shut in 2015, with two units it says would be 20% cleaner. | |
But campaigners say coal should not be part of the UK's energy future and want money spent on green technologies. | But campaigners say coal should not be part of the UK's energy future and want money spent on green technologies. |
E.On first applied for permission to build a new plant at Kingsnorth in December 2006. | |
Campaigners acquitted | |
In October 2007 Greenpeace campaigners shut the existing plant down by chaining themselves to the conveyer belt, leading to the arrests of more than 30 activists. | |
Then in August 2008, an estimated 1,000 demonstrators attended a camp to protest against plans for the new power station. | |
The policing of the event was later criticised as having been disproportionate and heavy-handed. | |
In September 2008, six campaigners involved in the original protest went on trial for criminal damage, but all were acquitted. | |
Ben Stewart, one of the so-called Kingsnorth Six, told BBC Two's Newsnight: "The case for coal is now collapsing. | |
"What we see now is it becoming increasingly unlikely that this power station is going to be built." | |
But a government statement suggested E.On still planned to build the new unit. | |
The Department of Energy and Climate Change said: "E.On's decision to delay their proposed project is a response to the global economic situation and they remain committed to developing clean coal." |