Exodus fear in Greece’s north as brown coal plants close

A photo of the Agios Dimitrios Power Station, a lignite-fired power plant next to solar panels in Agios Dimitros, near Kozani, in northwestern Greece. (AFP)
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Updated 27 December 2025
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Exodus fear in Greece’s north as brown coal plants close

  • Western Macedonia has for decades been the center of Greece’s brown coal mining industry that fed its lignite-fired power stations

PTOLEMAIDA: Mayor Panagiotis Plakentas fears what will happen to the town of Ptolemaida and the surrounding region when the last of the brown coal power plants in northern Greece close next year.
He told AFP that eight out of 10 young people who leave the region to study never come back and it risks “turning into Detroit,” the US city devastated by the collapse of the car industry.
Western Macedonia has for decades been the center of Greece’s brown coal mining industry that fed its lignite-fired power stations.
But now with power plant after power plant closing “unemployment is rising and the jobs that are being cut aren’t being replaced,” said Plakentas, further crippling a region with the country’s highest jobless rate.
Its last two brown coal plants will close next year, with the one in Ptolemaida being converted to run on natural gas, as Greece moves away from highly-polluting lignite in a sweeping transition toward renewable energy.

- Pollution and population decline -

Three men who will soon lose their jobs sipped their coffee as they looked at the chimneys of the doomed electricity station at nearby Agios Dimitrios, which will close in May.
“The lignite monoculture has been both a blessing and a curse for the region,” one said emphatically. “On the one hand, it has provided work for most people for decades, but the local economy’s dependence on it has been so great that it makes us feel there’s no tomorrow.”
Public power company PPC has promised more than five billion euros of investment in solar panel parks, data centers and energy storage units in the region over the next three years.
But the head of the local council, Ilias Tentsoglidis, said he sees no sign of these projects as he condemned what he called “brutal de-lignite-ization.”
Many locals want the land back that was expropriated by PPC years ago to mine the low-grade brown coal so they can farm it again.
“Our villages are emptying and, in the region’s most fertile plain, we’re sowing glass and concrete,” said Tentsoglidis in a tilt at the solar farms.
Western Macedonia’s unemployment rate is double the 8.1 percent national average, according to the ELSTAT statistics office. It has also recorded the sharpest demographic decline over the last decade, losing a tenth of its population.
More than 10,000 jobs have already been lost, unions estimate, and that is expected to double once the green transition plan is fully implemented in 2028.
But decades of lignite extraction has also affected the health of people in the region. Improved air quality resulting from the industry’s decline has been linked to drop in heart disease in the area, according to a study published this month in the journal Atmosphere.

- ‘Poison’ -

A court recently ordered PPC to pay around 1.5 million euros in damages for contaminating the groundwater due to poor management of ash around the nearby city of Kozani.
“We were drinking poison” without knowing it, said Tentsoglidis bitterly. “We woke up one morning and were told the water was no longer drinkable. Not only should we not drink it, we shouldn’t touch it either,” he said.
Alexis Kokkinidis, a 45-year-old mechanic who works at the Agios Dimitrios plant, feels “uncertainty and fear” about the future. “The only thing keeping me here is emotional attachment,” admitted the father of two, whose contract ends in May. “I was born and raised here, but you can’t live on feelings.”


UN chief calls on Israel to reverse NGOs ban in Gaza

Updated 03 January 2026
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UN chief calls on Israel to reverse NGOs ban in Gaza

  • In November, authorities in Gaza said more than 70,000 people had been killed there since the war broke out
  • Israel on Thursday suspended 37 foreign humanitarian organizations from accessing the Gaza Strip after they had refused to share lists of their Palestinian employees with government officials

UNITED NATIONS, United States: UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres called on Friday for Israel to end a ban on humanitarian agencies that provided aid in Gaza, saying he was “deeply concerned” at the development.
Guterres “calls for this measure to be reversed, stressing that international non-governmental organizations are indispensable to life-saving humanitarian work and that the suspension risks undermining the fragile progress made during the ceasefire,” his spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said in a statement.
“This recent action will further exacerbate the humanitarian crisis facing Palestinians,” he added.
Israel on Thursday suspended 37 foreign humanitarian organizations from accessing the Gaza Strip after they had refused to share lists of their Palestinian employees with government officials.
The ban includes Doctors Without Borders (MSF), which has 1,200 staff members in the Palestinian territories — the majority of whom are in Gaza.
NGOs included in the ban have been ordered to cease their operations by March 1.
Several NGOS have said the requirements contravene international humanitarian law or endanger their independence.
Israel says the new regulation aims to prevent bodies it accuses of supporting terrorism from operating in the Palestinian territories.
On Thursday, 18 Israel-based left-wing NGOs denounced the decision to ban their international peers, saying “the new registration framework violates core humanitarian principles of independence and neutrality.”
A fragile ceasefire has been in place since October, following a deadly war waged by Israel in response to Hamas’s unprecedented October 7, 2023, attack on Israel.
In November, authorities in Gaza said more than 70,000 people had been killed there since the war broke out.
Nearly 80 percent of buildings in Gaza have been destroyed or damaged by the war, according to UN data, leaving infrastructure decimated.
About 1.5 million of Gaza’s more than two million residents have lost their homes, said Amjad Al-Shawa, director of the Palestinian NGO Network in Gaza.