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‘Not backing down’: activists block hydro plants in N.Macedonia

Thomas Barnes by Thomas Barnes
August 6, 2025
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Environmental activist hold a banner reading "Rivers are not private business" as they gather to protest the construction of small hydropower plants on the Dosnica river. ©AFP

Gevgelija (Macedonia) (AFP) – Deep in the rugged forests of North Macedonia, small-hydropower developers are facing off with activists who warn that a thirst for lucrative green energy contracts is threatening the country’s rivers. For over a month, protesters have blocked roads into Hydro Dosnica’s remote construction sites on Mount Kozuf, where two small hydroelectric power plants are proposed on what activists claim is one of the last healthy rivers in the country.

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“Until the licenses are cancelled and all machines are removed from the river Dosnica, we will not move,” environmental activist Marina Tomova told AFP at her mountainous campsite near the southern border with Greece. Opponents have been fighting developers for years, fearing the plants will ruin a vital ecosystem in a basin already stretched by decreasing rainfall and hotter summers. Hydro Dosnica has rejected the allegations of damaging the river, and said the project follows environmental standards.

In recent years, Balkan governments have welcomed hundreds of hydro developments with lucrative subsidies, drawing a flood of investors who promise to harness a potentially reliable and renewable energy source. According to a 2024 report from conservation groups EuroNatur and Riverwatch, the Balkans have around 1,800 hydropower plants and over 3,000 planned. The vast majority are small-scale plants like those being built on the Dosnica. In response, protest movements have sprung up too, arguing that the ecological footprint and impact for those living on the rivers far outweighs the output from the small plants.

But the report also notes that hundreds of slated plants have since been axed and the booming number of planned builds has slowed slightly since its 2022 peak. North Macedonia has around 125 small plants, with plans to almost double that, according to the report. Much smaller than huge hydroelectric dams, the stations divert water through a pipe into a turbine kilometres downstream.

On Mount Kozuf, protesters accuse Hydro Dosnica of breaching its licence by illegally felling swathes of forest and irreparably damaging the river’s upper basin. Protester Kiril Ruzinov said that during summer months, the river’s flow slows and any redirection of the stream would run it dry. “It is too small; it cannot fill a tenth of the pipe. If it is put into a pipe, the whole riverbed will be extinct,” the 65-year-old told AFP.

The law requires developers to leave at least 10 percent of the stream to flow naturally. The developer Hydro Dosnica, in a statement to AFP, said the activist’s allegations were “incorrect and tendentious” and the project was “being carried out transparently, respecting all environmental and technical standards.” The firm said it was ready to engage with environmental experts and institutions regarding any new findings at the site. The environment ministry did not respond to requests for comment.

These small plants, with a capacity up to 10 megawatts each, accounted for just four percent of North Macedonia’s overall energy production in 2020, according to the latest available data from the state audit service. At the time, it had around 90 small hydro plants already in operation, according to EuroNatur and Riverwatch. Hotter, drier summers coupled with more extreme flooding events driven by climate change are posing a challenge to hydropower generation around the world.

A 2023 study of a different river basin, which begins in North Macedonia and flows into Albania and Montenegro, found that climate change could cut yearly hydropower generation there by up to 52 percent by 2050. The research, funded by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe, warned that hydro-reliant Albania would be worst impacted by changes in the Drina basin and suggested investing in other renewable sources to secure its grid.

One of the few rivers in North Macedonia still clean enough to drink from, the Dosnica is a small tributary to the Vardar, which flows into Greece. It is home to “exceptionally” valuable animals — including several protected species, according to environmental non-profit Eko Svest. Along with a group of prominent scientists, the NGO has appealed to the government to officially protect the river.

In a previous statement published online, the government said it was “closely monitoring public reactions and is ready to encourage an open and constructive dialogue with all stakeholders.” The government recently extended the license for the development until April 2026. “The devastating projects here have to stop,” Risto Kamov, from environmental activist group Changemakers4All, told AFP. “We are not backing down, and we will stay to protect Dosnica and Kozuf.”

© 2024 AFP

Tags: environmentprotestrenewable energy
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