威力彩玩法

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16 Jun 2015, 00:00
S枚ren Amelang Ruby Russell

In the media: Germany weighs further support for e-cars

Reuters

鈥淢erkel says Germany weighing further support for electric cars鈥

Chancellor Angela Merkel said further public support is needed to achieve the government鈥檚 aim of bringing 1 million electric cars on to German roads by 2020, reports Reuters. 鈥淕ermany will have no choice but to offer further support although we鈥檝e already done some things,鈥 Merkel told a conference on e-mobility. She said she aimed for a decision by the end of the year. Germany has so far refused to provide generous sales incentives for electric vehicles. The government's measures taken to date include tax breaks for owners of emission-free cars and about 1.5 billion euros in funding for related research projects, the article says. Merkel said other European countries with a higher share of electric vehicle sales, like Norway and the Netherlands, had used additional incentives to spur demand.

Read the article in English .

Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung

鈥淐ars with starting problems鈥

Further tax support for e-cars would be another sin of regulatory policy, argues Henning Peitsmeier in a commentary for Frankfurter Allgmeine Zeitung. If the government wants to make e-cars a success, it should instead announce clear targets for the number of new charging stations to be built, he says, adidng that instead of subsidising cars, the government could also cut taxes on electricity in general.

S眉ddeutsche Zeitung

鈥淭he car is the incentive鈥

2015 is not the year of the e-car, but thanks to cheap oil, it is the year of fuel-hungry SUVs, writes Thomas Fromm in a commentary for S眉ddeutsche Zeitung. But this might not be such a bad thing, according to Fromm. Strong sales of SUVs mean car manufacturers have to push e-cars at the same time, because otherwise they risk violating EU car emission limits applied to their entire fleet, argues Fromm. SUVs鈥 success also means car companies have enough money to invest in a new generation of e-cars. But tax breaks alone will not be enough to enable the new technology to take off, writes Fromm. 鈥淭he car itself has to be the incentive. E-Cars will be successful if drivers have an extensive and simple infrastructure for recharging at their disposal. That is still a long way off in Germany.鈥

Read the commentary in German .

听听听

Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung

鈥淕abriel proposal for energy reform delayed鈥

A decision on the contested coal levy and power market reform might be delayed, reports Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. According to the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi), a 鈥渨hite paper鈥 of concrete reform proposals will be published 鈥渋n June or July,鈥 according to the paper. Originally, publication was planned for early June.

Read 威力彩玩法's blow-by-blow account of the coal levy dispute here.

Read a 威力彩玩法 factsheet outlining the options for power market reform here.

Politico

鈥淐lean goals could cut dirty jobs鈥

Politico reports that while Merkel has positioned Germany as a global leader in the transition to renewable energy, she faces pressure over the risk to jobs posed by cutting fossil fuel use. 鈥淲hile the idea of moving from nuclear and fossil fuels to renewables holds broad public appeal, the potential social and economic side effects are worrying,鈥 the authors write.听

See the article in English听.

Handelsblatt

German energy efficiency keeps improving

The Handelsblatt reports on Exxon Mobil鈥檚 energy outlook for Germany, which says the country鈥檚 energy consumption could be cut by 30听 percent by 2040. The report predicts that the Energiewende will see coal鈥檚 share in the energy mix drastically reduced in the coming decades, with natural gas becoming the number one source of energy from 2030.

See the Handelsblatt article in German .

See the Exxon Mobil report in German .

International Energy Agency (IEA)

World Energy Outlook Special Report on Energy and Climate Change

The International Energy Agency's new report on energy and climate change, says the energy sector must be at the heart of the global climate change agreement at COP21, with targets set for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The report recommends key policy measures, including increasing energy efficiency, cutting the use of the least-efficient coal-fired power plants and banning their construction, increasing investment in renewable energy technologies in the power sector, and phasing out of fossil-fuel subsidies to end-users by 2030.

The report notes the strong growth of renewables 鈥 led by China, the United States, Japan and Germany 鈥 which it said accounted for nearly half of all new power generation capacity in 2014.听

See the report in English .

脰办辞-滨苍蝉迟颈迟耻迟, Fern, IFOAM

鈥淣ew research shows risk of including land use and forests in EU鈥檚 emissions target鈥

A study by the Institute for Applied Ecology (脰办辞-滨苍蝉迟颈迟耻迟) says including emission cuts from land use change and forestry (LULUCF) could in effect mean the EU missing its target of cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent by 2030. The research, commissioned by Fern and the International Federation of Organic Agricultural Movements (IFOAM), estimates that the actual reduction would be 35 percent or lower. The EU is due to close its consultation on the role of LULUCF in the climate effort this week. The study recommends establishing a separate target for this sector.

See a press release in English .听

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