Hot summer turns up the heat on Germany鈥檚 coal commission
Germany鈥檚 prolonged heat wave and drought have triggered calls for a rapid coal exit amid ongoing official talks on how to phase out the climate-damaging fossil fuel. 听听
鈥淭he current heat wave indeed puts more pressure on the government to react immediately to reduce emissions,鈥 energy economist Claudia Kemfert from the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW) told the 威力彩玩法. 鈥淭he coal commission will now also get more pressure from the public to show results that the coal phase out starts soon and will be finished not later than 2030.鈥
Greenpeace activists ascended a glacier on Germany鈥檚 highest mountain, the Zugspitze, and unfurled a banner that read: 鈥淪ummer 2018: heat, drought, glacial melting 鈥 Start the coal exit 苍辞飞!鈥
In a bid to improve Germany's poor emission reduction record and to identify economic perspectives for people employed in the waning coal industry, the government has set up a commission tasked with managing the definite phase-out of coal-fired power production in the country. By the end of the year, the commission is to name a coal-exit date. Despite Germany鈥檚 shift to renewable power 鈥 a policy dubbed 鈥淓nergiewende鈥 鈥 emissions have remained stubbornly high in the world's fourth largest economy because of continued coal power use.
鈥淲e are in the midst of the climate crisis and it will increasingly become worse. The rapid speed of climate change stands in sharp contrast to the snail鈥檚 pace of policy,鈥 Greenpeace spokesman Thilo Maack. 鈥淸Chancellor Angela] Merkel鈥檚 coal policy fuels extreme weather,鈥 the activists had previously projected on top of a cooling tower of a lignite power plant near Leipzig.
, the World Wildlife Fund for Nature (WWF) Germany and Germanwatch similarly invoked the heat wave to call for a rapid decommissioning of coal-fired power plants. 鈥淗eat and drought are harming people and nature both in Germany and worldwide 鈥 and yet the federal government still takes no action,鈥 Michael Sch盲fer, head of climate protection and energy policy at WWF Germany.
Green Party Chairwoman Annalena Baerbock that the fledgling coal-exit taskforce 鈥 officially known as the 鈥Commission on Growth, Structural Change and Employment鈥 鈥 would accomplish little to stave off climate change鈥檚 worst effects. But in fact a coal exit must be completed by 2030, she said. 鈥淭he extreme summer underlines how urgent this is,鈥 she .
The endless summer
Countless media reports have also made the connection between the heat wave, climate change, and government policies. Germany鈥檚 most important news magazine Der Spiegel ran a title story proclaiming: 鈥淕ermans get a taste of how climate change might affect their lives,鈥 before concluding that the extreme weather could be 鈥渁 wake-up call to prepare for a life with higher temperatures.鈥
Media reports on climate change got a further boost by an alarming co-authored by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) exploring the risks that the Earth might slide into a 鈥渉othouse鈥 state due to self-reinforcing feedback loops, even if national governments adhere to the central goal of the Paris climate agreement.
Georg Ehring wrote in a commentary carried by public radio broadcaster Deutschlandfunk that the dangers of a 鈥渉othouse Earth鈥 were real and that Germany 鈥brazenly ignored鈥 its national emission reduction targets. Maike Br眉lls wrote in a commentary in taz newspaper that the heatwave should finally make people feel the meaning of global warming and make them understand that we urgently need to fight it. 鈥淥bviously, humans have to experience a certain amount of suffering before they start to act.鈥 German tabloid Bild also repeatedly told its readers that heatwaves have become much more likely due to climate change.
The heatwave fanned the debate about climate change in other European countries, too. In Great Britain, Michael McCarthy wondered in the Guardian whether this is 鈥,鈥 given that even the conservative tabloid Sun prominently covered the link between extreme weather events and climate change.
But while a called on the government to push forward with the 鈥渄ecarbonisation of the electricity supply, heating and transport鈥, many German commentators failed to draw a direct link to ongoing coal exit talks.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the first time in a long while that media report on the causes and effects of climate change and the necessity of climate protection,鈥 the DIW鈥檚 Kemfert wrote . 鈥淭he media seems only to report about climate change if people 鈥榝eel鈥 that temperature is rising during a substantial heat wave,鈥 she told the 威力彩玩法.