Deutsche Welle (English edition)

German Cabinet approves landmark climate bill

The German government has approved a bill that would reduce greenhouse gas emissions at a faster rate with the goal of becoming climate neutral by 2045.

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Cabinet ministers and Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday agreed on a plan that includes making the country climate-neutral five years earlier than previously planned.

The legislatio­n is the German government's response to an unpreceden­ted April Constituti­onal Court ruling that demanded that the country share the burden of emissions reduction between older and younger generation­s.

What does the new law entail?

According to the draft, emissions in Germany are to fall by 65 percent by 2030 and by 88 percent by 2040 compared to 1990 levels.

Greenhouse gas neutrality is to be achieved by 2045.

Environmen­t Minister Svenja Schulze said the legislatio­n would ensure generation­al fairness without stalling the economy.

"With this law, we are achieving greater equality between the generation­s, greater security in planning for the future and a bold climate protection plan that does not stall the economy, but restructur­es and modernizes it," Schulze said.

Schulze added that Germany would seek to record negative emissions from 2050 onwards — absorbing more greenhouse gases than it produced. "We are talking about nothing less than a doubling of the tempo when it comes to climate protection," she said.

Fast-track implementa­tion plan The minister said "immediate measures" to put the implement the law are to be presented in the coming weeks.

Schulze had earlier told the public broadcaste­r ARD that the law was a "really important framework" because it makes climate protection legally binding. "No one can be able to duck away anymore," she said.

The legislatio­n requires responsibl­e ministers to immediatel­y make up for any failures of any relevant sector to meet its climate targets.

Merkel's conservati­ves are under some electoral pressure from the Green Party, which currently leads opinion polls ahead of September's general election. Speaking to ARD, Green Party leader Annalena Baerbock — a would-be successor to Merkel as chancellor — urged the government to "not just name targets, but also measures with which we can reach these targets."

rc/sms (dpa, AFP)

 ??  ?? A coal-powered plant in the German state of Brandenbur­g
A coal-powered plant in the German state of Brandenbur­g

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