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Our News
NEITHER GREEN, NOR CLEAN – Albanian prime-minister admits that small hydropower plants are “useless and harmful”
Prime-minister Edi Rama stated that the government will never again allow projects affecting people and important natural sites
According to Rama, all hydropower plants below 2 MW are useless and harmful. He went on to say: “There will no longer be permits in Albania for any hydropower plants below 2 MW and we will never again allow projects affecting people and areas of natural and tourism importance for the sake of power generation.”
"TOKA and the local people of Valbona Valley welcome the statement of prime-minister Rama, chiefly as an indication that government is beginning to understand, acknowledge and respond to both the many thousands of voices of Albanian citizens which have been raised for years in defence of their rivers and homes, as well as indicating a shift towards beginning to recognize the need to adopt international standards of sustainability, and sound and cautious ecological practice,” Catherine Bohne from the organization TOKA said in response to the prime-minister’s words.
The statement of the country’s prime-minister sets a precedent since, to date, the government has not spoken in any way against hydropower, nor did it even entertain the possibility that small hydropower plants pose a serious danger to people, the environment, and businesses. The government asked for a revision of current concession contracts and found that 27 contracts should be cancelled because “the construction has not yet started, or it started without permission, or has been abandoned for a long time”.
While the cancellation of 27 contracts is not based on the fact that small hydropower plants have significant ecological, social and economic impacts, it is a welcome decision by the government, heralding the possibility of removing subsidies and stopping all small hydropower plant development in Albania.
For numerous local initiatives from the Valbona to the Vjosa rivers and international organizations supporting them, such as WWF and RiverWatch, this public recognition by the government is an important step towards ensuring a sustainable future for Albanian free-flowing rivers.
“We have been actively involved with hydropower issues in Albania for years. In partnership with TOKA, a local organization from Albania, we have been fighting the proposed construction of 14 hydropower plants in the Valbona Valley National Park. The Valbona case demonstrates the real human cost of hydropower, since people were attacked, threatened and sued by both investors and the state. Local communities were actively silenced and the state exerted its power to discourage them from voicing their opinions,” said Zoran Mateljak, Freshwater program manager at WWF Adria.
Until now, actions of the Albanian government went directly against the Aarhus Convention that grants citizens access to information, public participation and access to justice in governmental decision-making processes on matters concerning the environment. To make things more absurd, Albania was one of the first countries to sign the agreement, yet, it has failed miserably in its implementation.
“Even though this doesn’t put an end to hundreds of other planned or under-construction hydropower plants across Albania, it is a confirmation of changes within the government and a positive response to pleas of individuals fighting for justice and the future of their rivers and communities. It is also an encouragement to initiatives in other Balkan countries fighting against more than 2,500 planned small hydropower plants. In the end, this is a very public confirmation that hydropower is not a green source of energy,” concludes Mateljak.

© Saimir Kalbaj
Valbona