Berlin, October 4, 2018
Four days before the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
puts forward its special report on 1.5°C, NGOs have released a new list
of the world’s top 120 coal plant developers. “Building
new coal plants is an assault on the Paris climate goals,” says Heffa
Schuecking, director of the German environment NGO Urgewald. “Our
list names the top companies investors and banks need to shun if they
are committed to limiting our planet’s temperature rise.”
While
2017 was another record-busting year for renewables, coal power is
still growing in many parts of the world. Currently, 1,380 new coal
plants or units are planned or under development in 59 countries. If
built, these plants would add 672,124 MW to the global coal plant fleet –
an increase of 33%. In order to prevent investments in this frightening
pipeline of new coal projects, Urgewald and 28 NGO partners have today
released the names and project details of the top 120 companies which
account for 68% of the global coal plant pipeline. The full list can be
accessed at www.coalexit.org/database.
Key Findings
The world’s largest coal plant developer is China’s National Energy Investment Group (NEI), which aims to build 37,837 MW
of new coal plants. The National Energy Investment Group was formed
last year, when the Chinese Government merged the Shenhua Group with the
China Guodian Corporation. The number 2 and 3 worldwide are the China Huadian Corporation with 25,097 MW and India’s National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC)
with 25,056 MW of new coal capacity in the pipeline. While these
companies already operate huge coal plant fleets, 28% of the world’s top
120 coal plant developers have no installed coal capacity as of yet.
Coal plant developers are a diverse group and also include companies
like the Texhong Textiles Group, which is planning a 2,100 MW coal plant
for its industrial park in Vietnam, or the Canadian copper miner First
Quantum Minerals, which is building coal power stations in Panama and
Botswana.
“Our analysis shows that in many countries coal mining interests are key drivers of coal power development,” says Schuecking. 46 of the top 120 coal plant developers are also coal producers
and the main rationale for building coal plants in ‘frontier’ countries
like Tanzania, Mozambique or Botswana is to power the development of
coal mining.
Out
of the 59 countries where new coal plants are planned, 11 countries
have only 600 MW or less of installed coal capacity and 16 have no
coal-fired capacity whatsoever. “2 1/2 years after the Paris
Climate Agreement was signed, it is worrying that these projects are
locking so many new countries into a cycle of coal dependency for
decades to come,” comments Lidy Nacpil from the Asian Peoples’ Movement
on Debt and Development.
The
world’s top 120 coal plant developers are headquartered in 42
countries, but almost 1/5 of the companies on the list have their
headquarters in China. While China is the largest producer of
photovoltaic power and the world leader in wind power generation, its
planned coal capacity additions of 259,624 MW account for over 1/3 of
the global coal plant pipeline. Chinese companies also play a
key role in building new coal power plants abroad, and are currently
developing 59,619 MW of new coal-fired capacity in 17 countries. Almost 19% of Chinese-led coal plant development is thus taking place outside of China. Japanese companies are, however, also champions of overseas coal plant development. All in all, Japanese companies account for 37,044 MW of new coal capacity, out of which 21,930 MW or 59% are planned overseas.
Bobby
Peek from the South African NGO Groundwork says, “From Egypt to South
Africa, virtually all of the new coal plants in the pipeline are
encountering enormous resistance on the ground. It’s time for
foreign investors and companies to stop pushing forward outdated energy
projects in our countries. People want clean and renewable energy
instead of filthy coal projects.”
The
release of the Coal Plant Developers List is aimed at the finance
industry. How many of the planned, announced or permitted new coal
projects actually move forward, is almost always a question of
financing. “Our list provides banks and investors with the
information they need to become responsible climate actors. Each and
every coal plant that goes online puts a new stumbling block between us
and the Paris goals,” says Schuecking. Over the past year, some
of Europe’s largest investors like Allianz, AXA and Generali have
adopted policies banning coal plant developers from their investment
universe. And many of the world’s largest international banks and
investors are now using Urgewald’s research.
While
the coal plant pipeline has shrunken significantly since 2016, mainly
due to new policies in China and the rapidly sinking costs of renewables
in countries like India, the world’s coal plant fleet is still growing.
Since the Paris Climate Agreement was negotiated in December
2015, the world’s installed coal-fired capacity grew by 92,000 MW – an
increase equal to the combined operating coal fleets of Russia and
Japan. “Financial institutions need to react and adopt policies for a full coal exit,” comments Schuecking.
Background on the Coal Plant Developers List
The
pipeline of new coal projects is very dynamic. Each year, new coal
plant plans are announced, old plans are abandoned or in some cases the
ownership of planned projects undergoes shifts. The first Coal Plant Developers List (CPDL) was developed by Urgewald in 2017 as a tool for banks and investors. In order to keep this tool sharp and effective, the CPDL is updated every year. This year’s list can be viewed at: www.coalexit.org/database
The 2018 CPDL is based on the following criteria:
Quantity (number of MW planned), Geography (the list is geographically
weighted to cover all countries where significant amounts of coal power
projects are planned) and Ownership (the list is based on equity and not
on EPC [1] or supply contracts). The CPDL was conceived as a
“short list” to guide investors’ first divestment steps. It is part of a
larger database called the Global Coal Exit List,
which provides information on over 700 companies with significant
coal-related business activities. For information on new coal plants in
the pipeline, Urgewald uses CoalSwarm’s Global Coal Plant Tracker
and supplements it with research of its own. We also do research on the
investors of the companies listed in the CPDL and will publish results
later this year.
For
a detailed overview and analysis of the dynamics and main players
behind each individual country’s coal plant pipeline, see Urgewald’s regional briefing accompanying the Coal Plant Developers List: www.coalexit.org/downloads

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