Germany to miss 2030 climate goal without coal phase out

Unless action is taken across the economy, the country will miss emissions goal by wide margin, government report shows

Located in the Rhenish mining area, the lignite-fired power plant Niederaussem is Germany's second largest coal-fired power plant.

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Germany will miss its greenhouse gas reduction targets for 2030 in all economic sectors, if no additional climate action measures are taken, according to a report on Germany’s emissions projections for the years until 2035, commissioned by the federal government.

The projections take into account all climate measures decided by summer 2018. Therefore, it does not include a commission proposal to gradually phase out coal by 2038 at the very latest. The grand coalition’s goal to expand renewables to cover 65% of electricity consumption in 2030, and additional renewables auctions are also not included, as a relevant law had not yet been passed at that time.

Germany will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 33% by 2020, falling short of the national target of 40%, according to the report. Ten years later, international and European agreements require the government to bring down emissions by at least 55% below 1990 levels. But the data indicates Germany is on track to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by only 42%.

Merkel pledges to make Germany carbon neutral by 2050

After it became clear that Germany will miss its national 2020 goal, it is now under pressure to meet its European target of cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 55% by 2030. To bridge the gap between climate targets and current emission trends, German chancellor Angela Merkel has introduced a “climate cabinet” to ensure more progress on emissions reduction.

The group of ministers with key responsibilities related to climate issues are supposed to come up with a package of legislation to ensure Germany reaches 2030 climate targets, to be introduced by the end of the year. Possible climate action measures that the cabinet is set to discuss now also include CO2 pricing, after the government has shied away from the discussion about what tabloids have already dubbed “yet another tax blow” for fear of angering voters.

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Germany must present an in depth report on its future emissions to the European Union every two years. The report is based on model calculations developed by a consortium of German research institutes, including the Institute for Applied Ecology (Öko-Institut) and Fraunhofer ISI. It includes all measures that the German government decided by August 2018.

More than half of projected emissions reduction will come from the energy industry, first and foremost due to a decrease in coal-fired power production, according to the report. The lion’s share of reductions in the other sectors will come from households. Here, renovation measures and a decrease of oil-based heating systems will be key.

This article was originally posted on Clean Energy Wire

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