Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany's floods bring climate policy into focus in election year

German politician­s have all rushed to express sympathy for flood victims and head to the disaster regions. But they are moving at different speeds when it comes to climate protection.

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When the storm and floods hit the west German states of North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate this week, Germany's top politician­s were on the ground quickly.

All three of the main parties' candidates to replace Angela Merkel as chancellor in this September's election dropped everything to go to the region — the center-right CDU's Armin Laschet, the Greens' Annalena Baerbock and center-left SPD's Olaf Scholz.

The behavior of politician­s at flooding sites has been decisive in German election campaigns before. In 2002, then-Chancellor Gerhard Schröder of the SPD was immediatel­y on the scene when the Elbe River burst its banks and caused immense suffering.

Laschet won't budge on climate policy

Scientists have linked the extreme flooding to climate change, leading to fresh scrutiny of the candidates' climate policies.

Laschet, in particular, has faced heavy criticism in recent days. The CDU emphasizes the importance of climate protection in its election manifesto, but critics have long accused the state premier of fighting for a late phaseout of coal.

The current federal government is considerin­g a coal pha

seout for 2038 at the latest, out of considerat­ion for the workers in opencast lignite mines. This is too late for the climate, environmen­tal groups have said. They point out that carbon emissions caused by coal production have been linked to the warming of the atmosphere, directly leading to extreme weather events like the disastrous flooding. The Greens, for their part, want a coal phaseout by 2030.

For Laschet, the topic is an emotional one: He nearly lost his cool on German TV channel WDR Thursday evening when asked about the coal phaseout by the host.

"Excuse me, just because of a day like this, you do not change the policy," said the chancellor candidate — a response that may linger with him for a long time.

Germany wants to be carbon neutral by 2045

The coal phaseout is not the only contentiou­s issue around climate policy. Germany and the EU have improved their climate targets; Germany wants to be

carbon neutral by 2045.

But when it comes to concrete measures, the parties' plans diverge. The CO2 price of €25 ($29.50) per metric ton on emissions from transport and heating fuels, which was set in January, is to rise step-by-step up to €55 in 2025, according to the plan of the current governing parties. But the Greens are calling for a price hike up to €60 by 2023, which has already brought them fierce criticism during the election campaign, especially from business representa­tives.

Paris Agreement broadly accepted

But all the parties in the Bundestag, with the exception of the right-wing populist Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD), are committed to the requiremen­ts of the 2015 Paris Agreement not to let global warming increase by more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) from 1990 levels.

AfD member of parliament Karsten Hilse, who is responsibl­e for climate, told the newspaper Welt: "Floods and inundation­s are natural phenomena." He claimed human-caused emissions do not play a role, not even in the current catastroph­e.

The AfD is largely alone with this opinion; human responsibi­lity for climate change and extreme weather events is no longer disputed by anyone in the establishe­d parties. The recent extreme summer heat in Central Europe — hot days over a long period with hardly any cooling at night, along with heavier and more frequent rainfall — has quietened mainstream naysayers.

Government pledges rapid aid

In terms of concrete aid for those affected by the disaster, the government wants to be guided by the sums that were paid in 2013 after the floods on the Elbe and Danube, which added up to over €8 billion. As early as next Wednesday, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer hopes that the federal cabinet will pass a resolution to this effect.

Laschet said Thursday evening on ZDF TV that roads, bridges and infrastruc­ture must now be quickly reopened. What is needed, he said, is "a national show of strength so that the worst things are quickly remedied."

Following the floods on the Oder, Elbe, Danube and Rhine between 1997 and 2013, there has certainly been a change in thinking about the major rivers themselves. Flood plains have been created, building in the immediate vicinity of rivers is no longer so easy and dikes have

been reinforced.

But in the current floods, smaller streams also burst their banks and became raging rivers. In addition, creating flood plains and removing buildings near rivers is not feasible for many of the affected small towns and villages. And ever-increasing urbanizati­on is covering land in asphalt and concrete, preventing natural runoff.

In 2017, the current government decided to reduce daily land consumptio­n in Germany to 30 (74 acres) hectares by 2030. At present, however, it is still 52 hectares, which correspond­s to an area of around 72 soccer fields.

And if there is no reversal of the trend in sight, all parties may need to step up their game and rethink their approach to flood protection.

This article has been translated from German.

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understand­ing this year’s elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developmen­ts as Germany enters the post-Merkel era.

 ??  ?? Onlookers marveled at the seemingly unpreceden­ted amounts of water in Lake Baldeney, near Essen
Onlookers marveled at the seemingly unpreceden­ted amounts of water in Lake Baldeney, near Essen
 ??  ?? Laschet, hoping to replace Merkel as chancellor, has been reluctant to speed up the phaseout of coal
Laschet, hoping to replace Merkel as chancellor, has been reluctant to speed up the phaseout of coal

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