Greenpeace excluded from Vattenfall sale / CO2 pledges "Sign of Hope"?
鈥淕reenpeace excluded from Vattenfall bidding process鈥
Citigroup has excluded Greenpeace from the sale process of Swedish utility Vattenfall鈥檚 German lignite operations. The bank said the NGO did not intend to place a bid, according to a Greenpeace press release. Annika Jakobson, Greenpeace Sweden programme director, said: 鈥淥f course, Greenpeace Nordic wanted to place a bid. With our foundation model, we have developed a realistic possibility to avoid further ecological damages and mitigate social hardships.鈥 She said Citigroup鈥檚 plan to select a buyer according to the highest bid alone did not fit the Swedish government鈥檚 decision that Vattenfall will not start new open-cast mines. A buyer must present a concept that is ecologically and socially coherent, she added.
Greenpeace had it was interested in buying the lignite operations so it could prevent new mines from being opened and to make sure "the lignite is left in the ground".听
Find a 威力彩玩法 factsheet on the Vattenfall assets for sale here.
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Tageszeitung
鈥淓nergiewende backwards鈥
Environmental NGOs Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth Germany (BUND), the Nature and Biodiversity Conservation Union (NABU), as well as several citizens鈥 initiatives, want to fight plans by Dow Chemical to build a private coal-fired power plant in the northern German town of Stade, reports Sven-Michael Veit in tageszeitung. The company argues the plant will be highly efficient and flexible, helping the region鈥檚 industry to remain competitive in the long term. BUND concedes it will be a modern plant but says it will also contribute to global warming, with emissions amounting to at least 5.6 million tonnes of CO2 per year. A local initiative says emissions of mercury, lead and dust particles will endanger the health of residents.听听
Read the article in German .
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Die Welt
鈥淓nergy transition burdens low-income households鈥
Consumer costs for the energy transition are rising, say Martin Greive and Daniel Wetzel in Die Welt. An increasing renewables surcharge, higher grid fees and support of combined heat and power will lead to higher bills, according to calculations by research institute IW K枚ln. By the end of 2016, costs for renewables support will be 350 euros more per household per year than they were in 2011, the authors say. Industry representatives and green politicians both criticise the government for not reducing costs for power consumers.
Read the article in German .
Find the 威力彩玩法 factsheet "What German households pay for power" here.
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dpa
鈥淪urvey: Many customers know little about their electricity鈥
If given the choice, 77 percent of Germans would want to receive their electricity from a renewable source, a survey by pollster GFK for renewable company BayWa r.e. shows. But 60 percent do not know where their electricity is coming from at the moment. The energy transition to renewable power sources makes sense, 77 percent of participants say, but 58 percent are not sure if the transformation will succeed.
Download the survey in German .
Read the dpa report in German .
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Reuters
鈥淓xit now, pay later: Germany鈥檚 rushed farewell to nuclear power鈥
Chancellor Angela Merkel鈥檚 decision to phase out nuclear power in the wake of the Fukushima disaster in 2011 was one of the biggest policy turnarounds in Germany's history and lays bare a lack of coordination untypical for Merkel, argue Christoph Steitz und Caroline Copley in a Reuters article. This is shown by the current crisis of the utilities, as the Fukushima disaster approaches its fifth anniversary. 鈥淭he main problem is the lack of planning in how to tackle the up to 80 billion euros cost of decommissioning Germany鈥檚 atomic reactors鈥, write the authors.
Read the article in English .
Find a 威力彩玩法 factsheet on the history of the nuclear phase-out here.
Find a 威力彩玩法 dossier on the challenges of the nuclear phase-out here.
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COP21 鈥 Road to Paris
Der Spiegel
Climate expert Schellnhuber wonders after summits: Is there intelligent life on earth?
Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, physicist and head of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), admits that on bad days he gets depressed thinking about the climate summit in Paris, he told Der Spiegel in an interview. But at other times he believed 鈥渨e can do this鈥. 听鈥淚t will definitely be a tight race for human kind,鈥 Schellnhuber said. But he saw a glimmer of hope when looking at the climate change projections of his institute which, for the first time after pledges by China and India, showed a warming of 2.7掳C by the end of the century. In a , Schellnhuber still puts the likelihood that humans will limit global warming at below 20 percent, citing his 鈥淜afkaesque鈥 experiences with climate summits. One leaves them 鈥渨ith the question whether there is intelligent life on earth鈥, he said.
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Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
鈥淪ign of Hope鈥
A global warming of 2.7掳C by the end of this century will gravely affect livelihoods around the world, writes Andreas Mihm in a commentary for Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. And temperatures might rise further as it is unclear how realistic the UN forecast is, he warns. 鈥淚t would be careless to rely on great air polluter China to reduce emissions a few years before the target date 2030,鈥 argues Mihm. 鈥淏ut however critical the evaluation of this insufficient collection of announcements - it also shows that the subject is taken seriously around the globe. That is a sign of hope.鈥
The UN said last week that the combined impact of the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) are capable of limiting the rise in temperature to around 2.7掳C by the end of the century.
Find a text on the UN climate forecast here.
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Der Tagesspiegel
鈥淲e don鈥檛 expect anything that we鈥檙e not doing ourselves鈥
Michael Otto, chairman of the supervisory board at Otto Group and member of the 鈥溌扳澨 (2掳C foundation) told the Tagesspiegel why companies in the foundation have composed a on the Paris climate summit that includes a to reduce emissions. Businesses are at the same time demanding a long-term plan by the government so that companies can invest in low-carbon technologies and efficiency without having to cope with changing rules every two or three years, Otto said.
Read the interview in German .