EBRD supports coal transition in Kragujevac, Serbia

Renewable energy Energy efficiency
National

Beneficiary Country:

  • Serbia Serbia

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Donor/IFI: EBRD
Starting Year: 2022
Budget: 18 mil EUR
Type of Donation: Policy based loan
Status: Planned
EBRD

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European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Green Energy Financing Facility

Short description of the overall project

Kragujevac, the fourth-largest city in Serbia, will make a big leap in its transition away from coal, thanks to an €18 million loan provided by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) for the decarbonisation of the district heating system.

 

Short description of activities financed by the donation

The EBRD loan will finance the decommissioning of coal boilers in the city’s district heating system, the installation of new natural gas boilers and the remediation of an open ash-disposal site. The financing will be complemented by technical support to the district heating company to help further decarbonise the heat supply and introduce renewable energy sources.

Kragujevac suffers from very poor air quality, with the city’s district heating system one of the main sources of airborne pollution. Inefficient and dated coal-fired boilers are located near the city centre and cause severe damage to the environment. Air pollution is further exacerbated by an uncovered ash-disposal site, which not only emits airborne ash particles, but also contaminates soil and underground water.

The EBRD loan will help completely eliminate coal from Kragujevac’s district heating system by replacing the coal boilers with new, natural-gas-fired hot water boilers that comply with EU standards, and by remediating the ash-disposal site. This is expected to have enormous environmental benefits, including reducing the heating system’s emissions of carbon dioxide by 66 per cent, sulphur dioxide by 100 per cent, nitrous oxide by 89 per cent and particulate matter by 100 per cent, along with water savings of 55 per cent. The new boilers will also end the production of ash and slag and the related water contamination.