Company type | state-owned enterprise |
---|---|
Industry | Utilities, energy |
Founded | 2001 |
Headquarters | , |
Key people | Halil ALIÅž ( Chairman) |
Products | Lignite mining, electricity generation, transmission and trading |
Number of employees | 6052 [1] |
Website | www.euas.gov.tr |
The Electricity Generation Company ( Turkish: Elektrik Ãœretim A.Åž.; EÃœAÅž) is the largest electric power company in Turkey. [2] Owned by the government, it produces and trades electricity throughout the country. [3]
EÃœAÅž was founded by the government in 2001. Its main purpose was to plan and implement the energy policy of Turkey which, through the exploitation of the domestic products and resources, would distribute cheap electric power to all Turkish citizens. In 2018 it took over the state-owned electricity trading firm TETAÅž. [4]
As of 2019 [update] EUAÅž owns almost a fifth of Turkey's total generating capacity [3] including coal, gas, hydro and wind power stations. [5]
As of 2020 [update] EUAÅž owns most of the country's lignite in 7 coalfields, including the largest Elbistan. [5]
EÃœAÅž owns the old Can-1 and AfÅŸin-Elbistan B power stations and buys from private sector lignite-fired plants: these power plants pollute and cause early deaths. [6]
Çan-2 coal-fired power station opened in 2018 and EÜAŞ guaranteed 7 years of electricity purchases at a cost of between 64 and 70m USD per year. [7]
EÜAŞ (with state-owned gas and oil company BOTAŞ) is an oligopoly and sets a soft cap on electricity spot prices; whereas prices to end consumers are regulated. [8] In 2018 EÜAŞ lost 1.8 billion lira. [9] Support for coal in Turkey resulting from annual expenditures of EÜAȘ in primary materials and supplies is estimated at ₺953 million (US$272 million) per year (2016–2017 average). [10] According to Carbon Tracker in 2021 $300 m of the company's coal power investment on the Istanbul Stock Exchange was at risk of stranding. [11]: 12
Climate TRACE estimates the company's coal-fired power stations emitted over 6 million tons of the country's total 730 million tons of greenhouse gas in 2022: [12] [13] it is on the Urgewald Global Coal Exit List. [14]
Company type | state-owned enterprise |
---|---|
Industry | Utilities, energy |
Founded | 2001 |
Headquarters | , |
Key people | Halil ALIÅž ( Chairman) |
Products | Lignite mining, electricity generation, transmission and trading |
Number of employees | 6052 [1] |
Website | www.euas.gov.tr |
The Electricity Generation Company ( Turkish: Elektrik Ãœretim A.Åž.; EÃœAÅž) is the largest electric power company in Turkey. [2] Owned by the government, it produces and trades electricity throughout the country. [3]
EÃœAÅž was founded by the government in 2001. Its main purpose was to plan and implement the energy policy of Turkey which, through the exploitation of the domestic products and resources, would distribute cheap electric power to all Turkish citizens. In 2018 it took over the state-owned electricity trading firm TETAÅž. [4]
As of 2019 [update] EUAÅž owns almost a fifth of Turkey's total generating capacity [3] including coal, gas, hydro and wind power stations. [5]
As of 2020 [update] EUAÅž owns most of the country's lignite in 7 coalfields, including the largest Elbistan. [5]
EÃœAÅž owns the old Can-1 and AfÅŸin-Elbistan B power stations and buys from private sector lignite-fired plants: these power plants pollute and cause early deaths. [6]
Çan-2 coal-fired power station opened in 2018 and EÜAŞ guaranteed 7 years of electricity purchases at a cost of between 64 and 70m USD per year. [7]
EÜAŞ (with state-owned gas and oil company BOTAŞ) is an oligopoly and sets a soft cap on electricity spot prices; whereas prices to end consumers are regulated. [8] In 2018 EÜAŞ lost 1.8 billion lira. [9] Support for coal in Turkey resulting from annual expenditures of EÜAȘ in primary materials and supplies is estimated at ₺953 million (US$272 million) per year (2016–2017 average). [10] According to Carbon Tracker in 2021 $300 m of the company's coal power investment on the Istanbul Stock Exchange was at risk of stranding. [11]: 12
Climate TRACE estimates the company's coal-fired power stations emitted over 6 million tons of the country's total 730 million tons of greenhouse gas in 2022: [12] [13] it is on the Urgewald Global Coal Exit List. [14]