May 20, 2024

Polish miners call off Russian coal blockade after Warsaw pledges industry support

Polish miners block a railway for trains carrying Russian coal at the border crossing in Braniewo, September 24, 2014 (Reuters / Grzegorz Szaro)

Polish miners block a railway for trains carrying Russian coal at the border crossing in Braniewo, September 24, 2014 (Reuters / Grzegorz Szaro)

Coalminers blocking “cheap” Russian coal at the Poland-Russia border have reportedly reached a deal with the government in Warsaw to consider new coal trade laws that will better protect the country’s coal industry.

Coal deliveries from
Russia have now resumed, according to a representative at the
railway station in Russia’s Kaliningrad enclave, which borders
Poland and the Baltic Sea but not mainland Russia.

“At 6:15am Moscow time,
the train departed the Russian station Mamonowo and after
sometime crossed the Russian-Polish border,”
a representative said, RIA Novosti
reported. According to the representative, another train will
cross the border at 5pm Thursday local time.

“The decision to finish the protests at Braniewo is because
we received a positive message from the prime minister, Eva
Kopacz, and cabinet ministers,”
ITAR-TASS reported Dominik
Kolorz, leader of the Solidarity Union in the Slasko-Dabrowskie
region, as saying.

On Wednesday, Polish PM Ewa Kopacz asked parliament to speed up
the introduction of new coal trade laws, and announced she was
commissioning a report on the country’s coal mining industry,
Polish Radio reported. The policy shift came after over 200
Polish miners blocked the delivery of Russian coal at a
railway crossing at the Branevo-Mamonowo border post.

A planned October 1
protest by the Solidarity miners’ union in Warsaw will go ahead
as planned, said Kolorz, the union’s leader.

The miners, who hail from the southwest Silesia region of Poland,
sent PM Kopacz a petition that said imports from Russia were
“unfair” are “ruining” the Polish mining
industry and taking local jobs.

The protest is being led by mining union leaders, who want an
embargo on the import of Russian coal to protect local miners and
companies that are losing hundreds of millions of euros (billions
of Polish Zloty) due to expensive labor costs and a decrease in
prices and demand.

Poland is a major producer of coal, but still imports about 10
million tons per year from Russia and the Czech Republic. The
country also exports 10.6 million tons of coal annually.

Coal industry in Poland provides over 55 percent of the country’s
primary energy demand, with about 90 percent of electricity
sourced from coal in 2013.


Article source: http://rt.com/business/190536-polish-coal-miners-blockade-finshed/

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