George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Turkey plans world's biggest coal fired power plant, one of 80 new coal plants in its pipeline, seeks to reduce dependence on Russian gas-UK Guardian

8/6/15, "Is it too late to stop Turkey's coal rush?" UK Guardian, Damian Carrington




"The Afşin-Elbistan station is planning to expand into the biggest coal-fired power plant in the world....

Turkey has very big plans for coal, with more than 80 new plants in the pipeline, equivalent in capacity to the UK’s entire power sector. The scale of the coal rush is greater than any country on Earth, after China and India....

Turkey is desperate to keep stoking its fast-growing economy and to wean itself off its enormous dependence on Russian gas. But opponents warn that coal brings a heavy human health toll, estimated to already cost Turkey several billion Euros a year, and they point to the virtual absence of solar power in the sunny country.

A short drive from Goğulhan, Hussein Alp Aslan, is looking down on vast 20km-long opencast coal mine that feeds the Afşin-Elbistan plant with low-quality, highly polluting lignite coal....

Aslan is clear how Turkey’s future energy needs should be met: “Turkey is a sunny country and in this region we could build hundreds of wind turbines. What is most beautiful about wind turbines is they are built in isolated areas where nobody goes. Coal should be the last option.” But Afşin-Elbistan sits on the largest coal deposit in Turkey and the existing plants and mine employ about 2,800 people.

About 700km to the north, on the Black Sea coast, lies Zonguldak....A new $1bn coal power station is planned here, backed by Chinese investors....

For Sahin, coal itself is not the problem, but the way it it used. “I agree with the air pollution concerns, but they have to take the correct measures to put filters on the power stations, and they are not doing it,” he says. “We have to use local resources. Would you prefer nuclear power here? It is much more dirty – look at Chernobyl.”...

The small mine, producing 600 tonnes a day from its 4km of tunnels, is owned by Musa Demir. He is far less enthusiastic about the future of coal than his government, saying he has had to lay off half his 630 workers. His costs have been pushed up by new regulations following the 2014 mining disaster at Soma which killed 311 men and shocked the nation, which had the deadliest coal mining safety record in the world....

The Turkish government has emphasised the use of indigenous resources in pushing its coal rush, but 95% of the fuel used by plants built in the last five years has come from abroad. Opposition to these coal imports is an issue that unites both the coal miners and local groups campaigning against the new plant in Zonguldak, where a green mountain spur on the coast is being cut away to expand the port....

Despite the solar water heaters being near ubiquitous on roofs, the photovoltaic panels that produce electricity are rare. Government permits for solar panels are very limited, despite being oversubscribed by 10 times, and Turkey’s target is for just 5% of electricity to come from the sun by 2023....

A recent Bloomberg New Energy Finance report, commissioned by WWF-Turkey [and funded by European Climate Foundation], found that expanding Turkey’s wind, solar and hydropower could meet its energy needs for the same cost as the coal rush, while keeping carbon emissions level....

Atmiş is a forestry expert at a local university and points to a 36km [22.3 mi.] swathe cut through the region’s famous forests for power lines in December. The move, he says, is intended to make the approval process for the power plants a fait accompli, as is a new coal mine in Amasra....

The Guardian requested interviews with 

Turkey’s energy ministry, the 
environment ministry and the 
companies involved in the various projects
,
but none were granted.

Government support for coal is strong, including substantial subsidies, but projects in the newly privatised industry require financing. On 16th floor of Garanti Bank’s headquarters in Istanbul, the glass walls show a glittering panorama of the booming city as executive vice president Ebru Dildar Edin explains the bank’s approach.

Garanti Bank is the biggest funder of Turkey’s new coal plants and Edin says the projects represent attractive loans because the low price of coal makes them look profitable. But she acknowledges pollution and climate change concerns: It is not good that gas plants will be replaced by coal.

Edin says Garanti Bank imposes tougher environmental and social conditions on its loans and has turned down a coal project that would not agree to them. It was funded, nevertheless, by another bank."...






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Top image caption: "The vast open-cast coal mine and the state-owned coal power stations of Afsin-Elbistan that are planned to be expanded into the biggest coal-fired plant in the world. Photograph: Sean Smith for The Guardian"

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Second image, Map of Turkey coal plants from UK Guardian.


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Construction of new Erdogan palace destroyed part of environmentally protected forest given to Turkish state under Mustafa Kemal Ataturk (1881-1938):

12/9/2014, "Recep Tayip Erdogan’s Nice House and Bad Foreign Policy," Foreign Affairs Review UK, Miles Harrison

"The new Presidential Palace, also known as ‘Ak Saray,’ meaning ‘White Palace’ in Turkish – a name bearing close resemblance to AKP, the Turkish acronym of Erdogan’s political party– has been embroiled in controversy since its construction began outside the Turkish capital Ankara in 2011.[3] Built in an environmentally protected forest given to the Turkish state under Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the patriarch of Turkey’s secular democracy, its construction was declared illegal by several court orders earlier in the year. Undeterred, Erdogan challenged his opposition back in March to “tear it down if they [opposition parties] can. They ordered the suspension, yet they can’t stop this building."...

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Hundreds of trees were cut down to accommodate new palace 4 times the size of Versailles:

11/5/2014, "Turkey's president moves into world's biggest palace costing £384 million," UK Telegraph, David Blair

"Recep Tayyip Erdogan's new residence is four times the size of Versailles, comfortably exceeding the grandeur of Louis XIV of France"...

"The bathrooms have silk wallpaper and the whole edifice is surrounded by a forested park. Hundreds of trees were felled to make way for the president’s new home....

Unlike all previous presidents, Mr Erdogan routinely chairs cabinet meetings. He has also spent £115 million on a new presidential jet, designed and supplied by Airbus to his own specification. 

As for critics of his new palace, Mr Erdogan said: “No one can prevent the completion of this building. If they are powerful enough, let them come and demolish it.”"






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I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.