Tag

Energy transition

DEU , DEUTSCHLAND : Die Europaeische Zentralbank  EZB  in Frankfurt , 25.05.2023 DEU , GERMANY : The European Central Bank  ECB  in Frankfurt , 25.05.2023 *** DEU , GERMANY The European Central Bank ECB in Frankfurt , 25 05 2023 DEU , GERMANY The European Central Bank ECB in Frankfurt , 25 05 2023
News

Despite climate roadmap: ECB continues to accept fossil collateral.

Since the ECB postponed its plan to reduce climate-damaging investments in July 2024, it has accepted fossil collateral worth EUR 13 billion. The NGO Reclaim Finance criticizes the long maturity of individual assets as particularly problematic.

By Lukas Bayer

Feature

New government: How secondary climate policy is for the new coalition

Climate action will likely play a much smaller role in the next German government than under the previous one. This is suggested by the coalition contract, the distribution of responsibilities, and the minimal mention of this topic. While climate action will return to the Ministry of the Environment (SPD), the energy agenda will remain in the CDU-led Ministry of Economic Affairs.

By Bernhard Pötter

News

False statements about Germany: How US President Trump glosses over coal power.

US President Donald Trump has ushered in a coal revival for his country – and wrongly cited Germany as a positive example. On Tuesday, Trump signed an executive order to heavily subsidize coal as an energy source. Ministries and authorities are instructed to repeal all measures diverting the country from coal production.

By Lukas Bayer

News

25 years of EEG

The Renewable Energy Sources Act was enacted in Germany on April 1, 2000. It has fundamentally changed the landscape of energy supply and has often been copied worldwide as an export hit.

By Bernhard Pötter

News

German wind farms: Bids once again exceed tenders.

The trend towards oversubscribed bids for onshore wind turbines is continuing in Germany. The German Federal Network Agency published new figures on Tuesday. The turnaround could see expansion return to the expansion path of the Renewable Energy Sources Act (EEG) by early 2026.

By Lukas Bayer

Opinion

Energy policy as a security issue: Why new gas-fired power plants jeopardize Germany's future

The new German government plans to massively expand climate-damaging gas-fired power plants to ensure a reliable supply and stabilize electricity prices. However, the shifting global situation requires a resilient power grid. However, amid a new global situation, Germany's security requires a resilient power grid – renewable energies combined with storage and a reform of the electricity system instead of subsidizing expensive natural gas.

By Experts Table.Briefings