威力彩玩法

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23 Sep 2015, 00:00
S枚ren Amelang Kerstine Appunn Carl Morris

In the media: Diesel cheating; more money for combined heat and power

Die Welt

鈥淭he German government knew the cheating technology鈥

The German ministry for transport has known for a long time that car manufacturers are using technologies that interfere with emissions testing, Matthias Kamann reports in Die Welt. A to a query by the Green Party in July 2015 admitted that the ministry knew about the cycle detection technology and was talking to the EU Commission on how to adjust emissions tests to get more realistic results. 鈥淭his means the VW exhaust scandal is the result of a government policy that disregards all concerns for consumers and environmental protection and condones tricks and cheating,鈥 Oliver Krischer, deputy head of the Green Party parliamentary group, told the paper.

Read the article in German .

Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi)

鈥淚ncentives for climate-friendly power stations鈥

The government cabinet has decided upon a (CHP) which will almost double support for the technology to 1.5 billion euros per year. Because CHP uses fossil fuels more efficiently than power plants, which only produce electricity, the government wants to use the technology to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the power sector by 4 million tonnes CO2 by 2020, a BMWi press release states. The law focuses support mainly on gas-fired CHP plants, while CHP facilities using hard coal or lignite will not be supported in the future. In order to lower costs for households due to the extra CHP support, large power consumers will have to pay more, the ministry says in a press release.

Read the ministry press release in German .

S眉ddeutsche Zeitung/BMWi

鈥淭he power meter becomes digital鈥

The energy ministry (BMWi) has published a draft law on the digitalisation of the energy transition in order to improve the balance between power supply and demand, reports S眉ddeutsche Zeitung. The new meters can also count power flowing into the grid from private solar arrays or storage systems, according to the article. In contrast to the old system, the future decentralised power supply is characterised by electricity flows in both directions, says the draft law. The new meters also allow customers to spot more easily where electricity is wasted. The law aims to avoid additional costs for private households, according to the article.

Read the article in German .

Find the ministry鈥檚 draft law in German .

Federation of German Consumer Organisations (VZBV)

鈥淥bligatory Digitalisation through the cellar door鈥

The Federation of German Consumer Organisations (VZBV) claims that the draft law would allow grid operators to install smart meters in private households without their consent. 鈥淥nce again, the consumers are meant to be the paymasters of the energy transition. High tech in cellars brings little additional value, but additional permanent costs,鈥 said VZBV head Klaus M眉ller. He also claimed the new meters would collect sensitive data. 鈥淭he obligatory digitalisation through the cellar door is the wrong way.鈥

Read the VZBV鈥檚 statement in German .

Frankfurter Allgemein Zeitung

鈥淩WE open-cast mining to shrink鈥

The battle over RWE鈥檚 open-cast mining in Garzweiler II continues as the regional government plans to abstain from the resettlement of three small towns, reports Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. The RWE mine is also required to keep a larger distance from another nearby town, according to a draft government paper. RWE said this was unnecessary but welcomed the confirmation by the regional government that lignite mining will remain necessary beyond 2030 to secure energy supply, according to the report. The changes mean the possible output from the mine 鈥 currently estimated at 1.2 billion tonnes 鈥 would shrink by a third.

Read an online version of the article in German .

S眉ddeutsche Zeitung

鈥淥n tenterhooks鈥

Swedish utility Vattenfall cannot expect many offers for its German lignite operations, which it officially put up for sale on Tuesday, reports Markus Balser in S眉ddeutsche Zeitung. But Czech utilities CEZ and EPH are still interested, according to insiders of the sales process, writes Balser. 鈥淰attenfall is choosing a similar path as Germany鈥檚 largest power company E.ON, who split off its power plant operations and focusses on grids and renewables,鈥 writes Balser.

Read the article in German .

EurActiv.de

鈥淕erman government decries diesel car emissions鈥

The German government has hit out at the level of nitrogen oxide emissions from new diesel cars, writes Samuel Morgan for EurActiv Germany amid the Volkswagen scandal. It has complained to the European Commission about the emissions, which it claims are 鈥渇ar too high鈥. Germany has been under fire for some time over its high urban levels of nitrogen oxide 鈥 which can cause serious respiratory problems - but puts the blame firmly on diesel-powered cars, EurActiv Germany states.

See the article in English

Siemens

Siemens reveals 2030 carbon footprint goal

German technology giant Siemens plans to become the world鈥檚 first major industrial company to achieve a net-zero carbon footprint by 2030, according to a press release by the group. It aims to halve its carbon dioxide emissions 鈥 which currently stand at 2.2 million metric tonnes per year 鈥 by as early as 2020, it claimed. Siemens will invest about 100 million euros over the next three years in new technologies 鈥 such as energy management systems for manufacturing - to achieve the goals. 鈥淐utting our carbon footprint is not only good corporate citizenship, it's also good business,鈥 said Joe Kaeser, President and CEO of Siemens AG.

Read the press release in English .

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