Windpower in windless locations / Dispute over coal exit
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
鈥淪upport for wind power in windless locations鈥
Current proposals for the reform of the Renewable Energy Act (EEG) from Economy and Energy Minister Sigmar Gabriel could increase financial support for wind turbines in regions with little wind, writes Andreas Mihm in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. In order to avoid turbines being built exclusively in the windy north of the country, a draft paper suggests support in coastal regions might be cut, while inland locations might receive a premium of up to around 10 percent.
In a separate commentary on the proposals, Mihm argues that reform along those lines would be a regulative and tactical mistake. He says Gabriel鈥檚 professed aim of injecting more market forces into the system rings hollow. 鈥淕abriel鈥檚 market is called the state,鈥 concludes Mihm.
Find the article in German .
听
Die Welt
鈥淧lan for coal exit could endanger electricity supply鈥
It鈥檚 not surprising that operators of coal-fired power plants oppose a coal exit as proposed by think tank Agora Energiewende*, writes Daniel Wetzel in Die Welt. Steag, a utility that operates nine hard-coal plants, has calculated that Agora鈥檚 exit plans would lead to a shortfall in power-generating capacity by 2025. Independent capacity would be reduced to 50 gigawatts (GW), while Germany鈥檚 power demand amounts to 85 GW at peak times, Steag warns. This gap cannot be filled by power imports or electricity storage, according to the utility. And shutting down coal-fired combined heat and power plants (CHP) would put an end to a very efficient form of heat generation, Steag says. Agora鈥檚 suggestion for deleting EU emission allowances from 2020 is 鈥渨ithout any chance of getting political majority on the EU level鈥, Wetzel quotes the utility as saying.
Responding to Steag鈥檚 criticism, Agora said secured capacity in their exit plan would amount to 78 GW (not 50 GW) and that the European power market would secure electricity supply. Coal CHP would be substituted by new gas-fired CHP, the think tank said.
Steag is among the bidders for Vattenfall's German lignite operations.
Read the article in German .
听
Reuters
鈥淐hina鈥檚 solar capacity overtook Germany in 2015, industry data show鈥
China鈥檚 solar photovoltaic capacity likely surpassed Germany鈥檚 last year, reports Reuters. China's installed photovoltaic solar capacity stood at 43 gigawatt (GW) by the end of the year, up about 15 GW from 2014, the China Photovoltaic Industry Association (CPIA) said, according to the official Xinhua news agency. The figure for Germany is roughly 40 GW, according to data from the German听Federal Network Agency and Fraunhofer ISE.
China's National Energy Administration has said China will add 15 GW of solar capacity in 2016, according to the article. Germany鈥檚 about 2.5 GW.
Find the article .
听
Green Budget Germany
鈥淎 few more cents on petrol could effectively support e-mobility鈥
Supporting e-car development with a premium to buyers of electric vehicles will only make sense for climate protection if it鈥檚 not paid for out of the state budget but by charging more for particularly heavy CO2 emitters, Green Budget Germany (贵脰厂) says. Cars with high emissions should finance the e-car expansion, for example through a moderately higher tax on petrol and diesel fuels. Raising the price of petrol by 1 cent and of diesel by 2.5 cents per litre would pay for the 2.5 billion euro e-car incentive programme that the energy ministry has suggested, the researchers say.
Read the 贵脰厂 press release in German .
Read a report on buying incentives for e-cars by 贵脰厂 in German .
听
Frankfurter Rundschau
鈥淧utting an end to cheating鈥
Growth in the important car industry cannot be an end in itself, Elzbieta Bienkowska, EU commissioner for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs, writes in a guest article for the Frankfurter Rundschau. Volkswagen鈥檚 malpractice shows that something has to change in the industry. Car manufacturers should drive innovation in the fields of automatic driving and see CO2 emission reduction as an opportunity. The EU commission should fix loopholes and tighten provisions and tests on emissions like NOx, Bienkowska writes.