EU plan for a low-carbon economy / Germany scores high on efficiency
European Commission
EU Member States must together reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 30 percent by 2030 compared to 2005 for the transport, buildings, agriculture, waste, land-use and forestry sectors, according to a proposal by the European Commission. The proposal includes binding annual GHG emissions targets for each of the member states from 2021-2030. Germany would have to reduce its emissions by 38 percent until 2030 compared to 2005. The affected sectors do not fall under the EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS), but made up almost 60 percent of total EU emissions in 2014, according to a by the Commission. The institution鈥檚 proposal package on 鈥淓urope鈥檚 transition to a low-carbon economy鈥 also includes a strategy on low-emission mobility and a proposal to integrate the land use sector into the EU 2030 Climate and Energy Framework. The latter contains a provision giving member states the possibility to include emission removals from land use 鈥 e.g. through forests that absorb the emissions 鈥 to balance out their emissions.
German environment minister Barbara Hendricks welcomed the Commission鈥檚 plan in a press release and said that Germany鈥檚 existing national targets were already 鈥渁 bit more ambitious鈥 than the proposed 38 percent reduction of GHG emissions. Hendricks also said that she would support only a 鈥渃autious application鈥 of exceptional regulations like using forest absorption to balance out emissions.
The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) claimed that the proposal meant that agreements from last year鈥檚 Paris climate summit were 鈥渘ot reflected in the concrete EU climate policy鈥, according to a press release. 鈥淣ot only is the target too weak, but the new plan is also riddled by loopholes,鈥 said Juliette de Grandpr茅, EU climate and energy policy expert at WWF Germany. In a separate press release, the non-profit environmental and consumer protection association Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH) writes that exceptional rules like the 鈥渇orest-loans鈥 would have 鈥渇atal consequences for the effectiveness of the instruments鈥.
Read the press release and find the corresponding material in English .
Find the German press releases by the environment ministry , by WWF and by DUH .
Frankfurter Rundschau
The EU Commission missed its opportunity to introduce more ambitious climate targets with its proposal package for a low-carbon economy, writes Joachim Wille in an opinion piece in Frankfurter Rundschau. 鈥淭he EU Commission pretends [鈥 that 鈥楶aris鈥 never happened,鈥 writes Wille and adds that there was little hope for more ambitious targets resulting from the subsequent legislative process.
Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy
Denmark and Germany have agreed on two separate but mutually opened PV auctions to be held in 2016, the Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi) has said. Denmark will partially open one auction round with a capacity of 20 megawatt (MW) to bids for ground-mounted solar PV projects from Germany. Germany will in return open a 50 MW round to installations located in Denmark. The cross-border pilot will be the first time that European two countries have cooperated in auctioning support for renewables. The agreement is based on the principle of reciprocity and the ability of physical electricity exchange between the countries.
Read the ministry press release and download the agreement in English .
Read a 威力彩玩法 factsheet on Germany鈥檚 new auction scheme for renewables.
Vattenfall
Swedish utility Vattenfall, which operates many conventional power plants in Germany and is selling its German lignite operations to Czech investor EPH, has published its half-year 2016 figures. It says that challenging market conditions forced it to make 鈥渟ignificant impairments鈥. Out of 30 billion SEK (ca. 3 billion euros) impairments, 21 billion SEK (ca. 2.2 billion euros) were 鈥渁ttributable to Vattenfall鈥檚 lignite operations鈥 in Germany, the company said, adding that the negative effects would have been even greater if Vattenfall had held on to the operations. Nevertheless, 鈥淕ermany continues to be one of Vattenfall鈥檚 most important markets, with operations in all core business areas鈥, CEO Magnus Hall said.
Read the press release in English .
Read a 威力彩玩法 article on the sale of Vattenfall鈥檚 German lignite operations to Czech investor EPH.
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE)
The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) has published its 2016 International Energy Efficiency Scorecard. Germany is ranked as the world leader in energy efficiency, followed by Italy, Japan, France and the UK. The US came 8th. The 23 countries in the ranking represent 75 percent of all energy consumed, an ACEEE press release states. The organisation evaluated each country for 35 different energy efficiency indicators in four different categories. Germany scored highest in the categories of national efforts, buildings and industry, but was overtaken by India, Italy and Japan in the transport category.
Read the press release in English and Germany鈥檚 score sheet .
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
The resolute application of a ban on diesel vehicles in big cities would upset economic activity as trucks, delivery vans and buses for public transport would be prohibited as well, writes Holger Appel in an opinion piece in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Appel calls for alternatives: 鈥淐ity buses with fuel cells, taxis with hybrid drive, government fleets with electric motors 鈥 those would be useful measures.鈥
For background, read the 威力彩玩法 dossier The energy transition and Germany鈥檚 transport sector.
PV magazine
PV magazine
鈥淥wn consumption after feed-in payments run out will stimulate storage 尘补谤办别迟鈥
More than half of solar PV installation operators in Germany want to use their generated power themselves once their 20-year feed-in remuneration runs out, a study by , seen by PV magazine has found. This development will boost the demand for power storage systems, the consultancy concluded. EuPD Research conducted the survey among 800 solar PV plant owners and project developers.
Read the EuPD Research press release in German .
Read the PV magazine article in German.
Forbes Mexico
Germany could work as an example to Mexico concerning the social challenges and consequences of a transition from fossil to renewable fuels, writes Juliana Fregoso for Forbes Mexico. Mexico could learn from German Energiewende experiences that energy generation does not need to be in the hands of big business and that the integration of the population in the process is important. In light of the corruption in the country, Mexico鈥檚 government could use the energy transition as an opportunity to gain back the support of the citizens.
Read the article in Spanish .
Inter Press Service
Germany鈥檚 Energiewende has so far failed to turn the country away from the electricity production from hard coal and lignite, writes Emilio Godoy in an article on Inter Press Service. 鈥淭he persistence of fossil fuels casts a shadow on [Germany鈥檚] green energy matrix,鈥 writes Godoy.
Read the article in English (Spanish also available) .