威力彩玩法

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25 Jun 2018, 13:54
Luke Sherman Benjamin Wehrmann Julian Wettengel

Stakeholders weigh in ahead of coal commission's first session

Rheinische Post

Germany will not be able to phase out coal-fired power production by 2030, said Rolf Martin Schmitz, head of RWE, the country鈥檚 biggest power producer and Europe鈥檚 biggest private emitter of CO2. In an interview with the Rheinische Post on the eve of the first meeting of Germany鈥檚 coal exit commission, Schmitz said, 鈥淧olitical gestures don鈥檛 produce electricity.鈥 He argued that the speed of Germany鈥檚 power grid expansion and the growing share of renewables will determine when the last coal plant is taken offline. Existing coal plants should be considered a 鈥渂ridge technology鈥 and if policymakers wanted to 鈥減rematurely鈥 end the use of coal, 鈥渢hey will have to put a price tag on that, which says how many jobs will be lost, by how much the power price will rise, and that companies might leave the country because supply security becomes more difficult.鈥

Read the interview in German .

For background, see the factsheet Germany鈥檚 coal exit commission and the article Germany starts coal exit talks in bid to improve patchy climate record.

Die Welt

The federal government wants to soften the blow of phasing out coal by investing in large battery factories, or Gigafactories, according to an article in Die Welt. In coal-mining areas around the country, these manufacturing facilities could provide a new source of employment to affected workers. The German car industry and battery manufacturers have yet to invest seriously in such factories because of a high degree of risk, leading the federal government to consider filling this investment gap. Coal-fired power generation and mining employs over 25,000 people in Germany and tens of thousands jobs more indirectly depend on coal.聽 For Germany to meet it climate goals, experts believe it will have to invest substantially in energy-storing technologies.

Read the article in German .

For background, see the factsheet Germany鈥檚 coal exit commission and the dossier New technologies for the Energiewende.

Green Budget Germany / Greenpeace Energy

Germany can save nearly 28 billion euros a year if it stops mining and using lignite, a study by Green Budget Germany (贵脰厂) commissioned by green power provider Greenpeace Energy has found. Apart from the costs of energy generation with lignite, which is also called brown coal, the study also includes the costs from detrimental climate and public health effects that result from burning the carbon-intensive fossil power source. At over 23 billion euros annually, these costs made up the bulk of total lignite costs, the researchers found. 鈥淭he study debunks the myth that lignite is a cheap power source and shows that it actually is one of the most expensive forms of power production there is,鈥 said Greenpeace Energy鈥檚 Janne Andresen. Exiting coal therefore not only was necessary to protect the climate but also an economic imperative, Andresen said.

Find the study in German .

For background, see the factsheet Germany鈥檚 coal exit commission and the article Germany starts coal exit talks in bid to improve patchy climate record.

Handelsblatt

The commission tasked with Germany鈥檚 coal phase-out should avoid coming up with 鈥渜uick and symbolic鈥 scenarios to end the use of the fossil power source in the country, Dieter Kempf, president of the influential industry association BDI said in a guest commentary for Handelsblatt. The commission should not just administer the exit, but rather also 鈥渢he entry into a sustainable agenda of modernisation,鈥 he said. Kempf said climate policy is 鈥渁 marathon, not a sprint鈥 and Germany must find the appropriate pace for phasing out coal to avoid high costs and uncertain supply security. The industry lobbyist insisted that the BDI supports climate action in principle, as proven by its own study on reaching Germany鈥檚 climate goals. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about finding the right balance between ecologic necessities and economic prudence,鈥 Kempf said.

Find the article in German (paywall).

For background, see the factsheet Germany鈥檚 coal exit commission and the article Germany starts coal exit talks in bid to improve patchy climate record.

tageszeitung (taz)

As Germany鈥檚 coal commission prepares to convene for the first time on Tuesday, environmental groups are criticising the government鈥檚 slow action on combatting climate change, writes Malte Kreutzfeldt in the taz. Organised by environmental groups like Greenpeace and BUND, over a thousand climate activists demonstrated in Berlin on Sunday, two days before the first meeting of the coal-exit commission.聽 The activists want a coal-exit date of 2030 at the latest. 鈥淚t is high time for us to exit coal,鈥 said Martin Kaiser from Greenpeace. Martin Wolf, president and CEO of German electric utility RWE, warned that a coal phase-out by the end of next decade is not possible, however. 鈥淲hoever wants to exit coal too quickly will have to pay more for it,鈥 he said. Economy minister Peter Altmaier agrees that Germany will not be able to cease using the fuel by 2030, but environmental groups remain unconvinced.

Read the article in German .

For background, see the factsheet Germany鈥檚 coal exit commission and the article Germany starts coal exit talks in bid to improve patchy climate record.

Welt am Sonntag

As the European Union sets itself more ambitious energy efficiency goals for 2030, Germany will miss its 2020 targets, writes Steven Hanke in Welt am Sonntag. 鈥淲e will not reach the efficiency targets we have set ourselves for 2020 in this way,鈥 said Ulrich Benterbusch, department head in the economy ministry. Economy and population growth, low wholesale prices for fossil energies and lagging energy-efficient modernisation of buildings are the main reasons, writes Hanke.

For background, read the 威力彩玩法 dossier The Energiewende and efficiency and the article Govt energy transition commission calls for CO2 price, mobility action.

Handelsblatt

The Greens parliamentary group wants to re-introduce the nuclear fuel tax and use it to pay the compensation to nuclear power plant operators for losses after the government pulled forward its nuclear power exit in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear incident, writes Klaus Stratmann in Handelsblatt. The parliament is currently debating the law reform that would regulate the compensation payments, and the Greens want to change Germany鈥檚 constitution, or basic law, to enable the re-introduction of the fuel tax law. In 2017, the had declared the nuclear fuel tax law invalid and incompatible with basic law.

Read the article (behind paywall) in German .

For background read the 威力彩玩法 dossier The challenges of Germany鈥檚 nuclear phase-out.

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