Bavarian Merkel ally calls for coal exit by 2030, protesters storm lignite mine
M眉nchner Merkur / Die Welt / WDR / 威力彩玩法

The leader of the Bavarian conservatives has called for an exit from coal-fired power generation by 2030 in Germany as thousands protested against further mining of lignite and activists stormed a mine operated by energy company RWE. 鈥淟et鈥檚 be honest: Germany can only reach its 2030 climate goals if we accelerate the coal exit massively,鈥 said Markus S枚der, the state prime minister of Bavaria and leader of the conservative CSU, sister party and government coalition partner of Chancellor Angela Merkel's CDU. In an interview with the regional newspaper聽, S枚der聽reiterated his recent criticism聽of the results of the so-called coal commission, which proposed a coal exit by 2038 coupled with payments of 40 billion euros to promote structural change in the affected regions. S枚der, whose state has no coal mines and only a few coal-fired plants, said some of that money would be better spent on research into renewable energy sources.
The state premier of the East German lignite mining state of Saxony, Michael Kretschmer, rejected S枚der鈥檚 push. 鈥淕reat idea. If you don鈥檛 have any coal in Bavaria, it鈥檚 easy to call for that,鈥澛, whose party is neck-and-neck with the right-wing populist party AfD in polls for state elections in September. Kretschmer urged the conservatives to focus on implementing the coal commission鈥檚 proposal. The head of the influential mining union IG BCE, Michael Vassiliadis, ridiculed S枚der聽聽as someone 鈥減laying a climate activist鈥 with proposals at the expense of others, stressing that the union was committed to the coal commission鈥檚 proposal.
Government spokesman Steffen Seibert the commission proposal should be implemented because it reflected a broad societal compromise. The head of the CDU parliamentary group Ralph Brinkhaus also backed an implementation of the commission proposal.
In an聽聽with the public broadcaster WDR, environment minister Svenja Schulze said everyone interested in achieving progress in emissions reduction should help by boosting the share of renewables. 鈥淓specially the conservatives could help make things happen faster,鈥 Schulze said, inviting S枚der to 鈥渉elp out here.鈥 Schulze said her current plan was to implement the coal exit as it was agreed, adding that Germany鈥檚 highly anticipated Climate Action Law would be a crucial ingredient of that. 鈥淭his will all have to be decided this year,鈥 she said.
The CEO of energy company E.ON, Johannes Teyssen, told journalists in Berlin not to focus too much on the debate about an exact exit date. The success of the energy transition depended much more on the overall concept and measures such as a price on carbon or investment in innovative techologies, he said.
Climate change tops Germans' list of concerns
S枚der鈥檚 intervention came as several thousand protesters gathered for an anti-coal rally near the Garzweiler lignite mine, following a joint protest with more than 20,000 participants Fridays for Future climate activists in the nearby city of Aachen on Friday.聽聽broke through police barricades and ran into the Garzweiler mine. Mine operator RWE聽聽the protesters, saying the company was committed to the coal exit and there was no reason for illegal actions that put people in danger.
Germany鈥檚 federal government is in the process of turning the coal exit commission鈥檚 proposal into law. Climate action has climbed up in the list of issues Germans are most concerned about, in part driven by the Fridays for Future movement, and the Green Party has soared in opinion polls on the back of it, polling now on a par with Merkel鈥檚 conservative CDU/CSU alliance.
CSU head S枚der, whose party lost a significant voter share to the Greens聽in the 2018 state elections, said in the interview that the changes the world face were much graver than many scientists thought only years ago. 鈥淣ot to act would be a sin and a political mistake that would come to haunt us much faster than we think,鈥 he said. The leadership of S枚der鈥檚 CSU is due to set the guidelines for its own climate protection concept on 24 June.
His comments chime in with remarks from Merkel, who reiterated during the congress of Germany鈥檚 protestant churches in Dortmund that Germany 鈥渃an and will鈥 achieve climate-neutrality by 2050. The economy minister of the lignite mining state of North Rhine-Westphalia, Andreas Pinkwart of the pro-business party FDP, said an exit by 2035 might be possible, though a faster extension of power grids, renewable energies and storage is necessary.
Greenpeace Germany welcomed S枚der鈥檚 remarks. 鈥淣ow he has to make sure as a head of a governing party that the first plants will be shut down this year already,鈥 said Greenpeace managing director Martin Kaiser in a statement.