Each adult Pole should call their electricity supplier and demand an instant reduction in electricity prices. By one half, at least. There is an obvious reason: during last year, coal prices fell on world markets from $230 to $65 a ton. If a similar situation happened on the oil market, the difference in fuel prices would be felt overnight. So, why hard coal prices do not translate directly into power charges? "Because we still pay through the nose for coal. Market prices have nothing to do with this," says Polish power industry. That is a world-wide oddity. Having the largest coal resources in Europe and a 12,000 army of miners, it feels like we have to pay for gold, not for coal. Around the world, coal prices slump dramatically while Polish mines, being the main coal supplier for the power plants, hint at price increases. Someone has to pay for the pay rise which the miners of Kompania Węglowa fought for. Power charges are directly affected due to the fact that 95% of power come from coal. Coal purchases consume almost two third of the power plants' funds.
REKLAMA
Tomasz Molga
Read more why coal was more imported than exported in 2008 in the Monday issue of "Wprost".