Fear and loathing at Poland's Turow coal mine
The European Court of Justice has demanded Warsaw pay a daily fine of €500,000 after it declined to shut down Poland's Turow coal mine. Locals now fear the worst, but are their fears well-founded?
When the European Court of Justice (ECJ) hit Poland with a €500,000 ($586,000) daily fine on September 20 after Warsaw refused to shut down the country's Turow coal mine, many in the small Polish town of Bogatynia near the border with the Czech Republic and Germany feared the worst.
In June, Prague asked the EU's highest court to fine Warsaw €5 million per day for failing to halt production at the mine after arguing the mine created environmental problems.
The conflict was triggered when PGE, a state-controlled energy holding that runs the mine, said it was planning to expand digging closer to the Czech border. The Czechs are worried about the mine's impact on ground water levels, dust and noise. The Polish government say the planned mining area is within the boundaries stipulated by a 1994 permit and that studies have had minimal impact on ground water levels.
Czech Foreign Minister Jakub Kulhanek has indicated he wants to negotiate with Poland on the future of the mine, but added that environmental issues would be a priority. Bilateral negotiations are ongoing, though Polish officials said the country would not pay any fines nor close the mine. Officials from the two countries met again on September 27, telling reporters that talks were "difficult" and would continue this week.
"We are not going to turn off Turow, it would deprive millions of Polish families of electricity," Polish PM Mateusz Morawiecki said in a recent statement.
The mine, which has been operating since 1904, fuels a power station that provides 6% of Poland's electricity, to around 2.3 million Polish households, according to PGE. One in every two jobs in the region is directly or indirectly dependent on it. It employs about 1,250 people and is the fourth-largest coal-fired thermal plant in Poland.
Warsaw is locked in an ongoing spat with Brussels over linking rule of law breaches with financial penalties. The European Commission has accused Warsaw of backsliding, in particular over democratic accountability and independence of the judiciary.
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