Norway Turns Its Back on Hydropower
OSLO, Norway, January 4, 2001 (ENS) - Norwegian Prime Minister
Jens Stoltenberg has created a mini-sensation in Norway by declaring in
his traditional New Year's Eve national address that "the era of
large-scale new hydropower development is over" and that several big hydro
projects are to be abandoned.
Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg (Photo courtesy
government of Norway)
The prime minister said construction of
hydropower stations at Beiarn, Bjøllåga and Melfjord in Nordland county
would be halted. The futures of several other projects are also in doubt.
"I know that this is a decision that will provoke controversy. But the
benefits of these development projects are not sufficiently great to
justify irreversible encroachment on the natural environment," Stoltenberg
said.
Norway, one of the world's largest oil exporters, produces virtually
all of its electricity for domestic use from hydropower, averaging 115
terawatt hours annually.
Last year, however, Stoltenberg's minority Labour government made clear
its intention of promoting natural gas technology for electricity
production, and approved the construction of two gas fired power stations
at the west coast sites of Kollsnes and Kårstø.
State
owned power utility Statkraft, which was to have built the three new
hydropower installations, described the Prime Minister's announcement as
"frustrating."
On March 17, 2000, Stoltenberg was sworn in as Norway's prime minister
in the wake of an energy and environment controversy that prompted the
preceding prime minister's resignation. Former Prime Minister Kjell Magne
Bondevik stepped down after losing a parliamentary vote of confidence over
his attempt to prevent the construction of the two natural gas power
plants.
In a related development, Norway's Nordic neighbor Denmark has just
released figures showing that wind energy now contributes 13 percent of
national energy consumption, the highest proportion of any country in the
world. About 6,000 turbines were operating in 2000.
Further planned turbine installation is expected to take wind's
proportion of all energy to 15 percent by the end of this year.
The Danish Wind Turbine Owners' Association estimates that wind power
displaced four million tons of polluting emissions last year.
Danish wind turbines generated 4,500 gigawatt hours last year, the
equivalent of over 1.4 million tons of coal delivered in a train 590
kilometres (366 miles) long.
{Published in cooperation with ENDS Environment Daily, Europe's choice
for environmental news. Environmental Data Services Ltd, London. Email: envdaily@ends.co.uk}