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Feature

Kathrin Henneberger (Studentin, Feministin, Mitglied bei attac und Buendnis 90 / Die Gruenen) in der Talk-Show Maybrit I

'Even the Greens have been warned: The movement is serious'

Kathrin Henneberger sits as a climate activist for the Green Party in the German parliament. For the strike day of Fridays for Future, she wants to see a big protest on the streets – also against the policies of her own government. The dispute over the eradication of the German hamlet of Lützerath for an opencast mine has destroyed trust, but also strengthened the movement.

By Bernhard Pötter

India plans massive government aid for green industries

This weekend, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will visit India. The topic of climate and green industries will also be part of the talks. Like the EU and the US, India is preparing massive aid for new technologies in solar technology, green hydrogen and electromobility.

By Goswami Urmi

'Putin has committed natural gas suicide'

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has also destroyed Russia's primary business model, says expert Thane Gustafson: Export revenues from oil and gas are shrinking, jeopardizing the national budget. The country is "completely unprepared for climate change."

By Bernhard Pötter

KHANTY-MANSI AUTONOMOUS AREA, RUSSIA -  21, 2020: A helicopter battles a wildfire in the taiga in Sovetsky District of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Area, north-west Siberia. On 14 July 2020, the local authorities declared a state of emergency in wooded areas of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Area. Since the start of the fire season , more than 240 wild fires covering an area of more than 29,000 hectares have been reported in the region. Denis Bushkovsky/TASS PUBLICATIONxINxGERxAUTxONLY TS0E0B30

The war also damages Russia's climate policy

One year after the start of the Ukraine war, Russia's climate policy continues to favor natural gas, nuclear power and a controversial statistic that records forests as carbon sinks. Moscow discredits the international climate process as Western power politics. And climate action is also hampered by war and sanctions.

By Redaktion Table

President of the World Bank Group David Malpass looks on during an open press conference during the International Moneta

Fight for the climate path of the World Bank

Following the unexpected announcement of the resignation of World Bank chief David Malpass, the struggle over the future orientation of the Bank is beginning. Calls for more climate action and sustainability in the World Bank Group are growing louder. But such a change of course is also controversial.

By Bernhard Pötter

Anteil chinesischer Unternehmen an der weltweiten Produktion von Solaranlagen (EN)

Ways out of solar dependence on China

China's planned export restrictions on solar production plants could hinder the development of the European solar industry. But experts believe there are ways out of dependence. The decisive factor, they say, is how politics react. Expertise and technical knowledge are still available.

By Nico Beckert

record-ol-and-gas-profits

Oil companies abandon climate plans

Many oil and gas companies have set more or less ambitious climate goals in the past. But after record profits, more and more companies and governments are now abandoning the idea of leaving fossil fuels in the ground.

By Bernhard Pötter

Windkraftanlagen stehen auf einem Feld bei Erkelenz nahe des Braunkohletagebau Garzweiler II, dahinter das Kohlekraftwer

Germany wants to remove allowances from coal phase-out

It is the decisive question for climate action when it comes to the coal phase-out: Will the emission allowances freed up by the coal phase-out be removed from the market? The German Ministry of Economic Affairs wants to remove these allowances from the market. This could cost the German government billions.

By Bernhard Pötter

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken meets with German Vice-Chancellor and Minister for Economic Affairs and Climate Act

EU-USA: Green free trade to defuse IRA dispute

German Minister for Economic Affairs Habeck and his French counterpart Le Maire discussed possible ways out of the IRA subsidy dispute with the US government in Washington. They offered closer cooperation on green tech and supply chains. The USA wavers between protectionism and dependence.

By Bernhard Pötter