The Borneo Post

Germany needs to stop burning so much coal

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THE FOLLOWING editorial appears on Bloomberg View:

Germany is widely seen as a world leader in the fight against climate change. Thanks to its investment­s in renewable power, wind and solar energy provide a third of its electricit­y, more than double the US share. Germany’s goal to lower carbon- dioxide emissions 40 per cent by 2020 is significan­tly more ambitious than that of Europe as a whole or the US

After the US withdrawal from the Paris climate accord, Chancellor Angela Merkel vowed even greater determinat­ion. “We can’t wait for the last man on Earth to be convinced by the scientific evidence for climate change,” she explained.

But there’s another, troubling side to the German story: The country still gets 40 per cent of its energy from coal, a bigger share than most other European countries. And much of it is lignite, the dirtiest kind of coal. As a result, Germany is set to fall well short of its 2020 goal.

This dependence on coal is partly a side effect of Germany’s abandonmen­t of emissionsf­ree nuclear power and partly foot- dragging on the part of a government wary of alienating voters in German coal country. During the summer election campaign, Merkel largely avoided the subject.

Suddenly, though, the politics have changed. Merkel is struggling to form a new government, and the Green Party, one of three would-be coalition partners, is insisting that coal-fired power plants start to close – the 20 dirtiest ones right away. This wouldn’t solve the problem, but it would put Germany on a path to serious emissions reductions, and it’s the only way to bring that 2020 emissions target back in sight. To live up to the claims she’s been making, Merkel should deliver these closures.

It’s not just the political moment that’s right. German unemployme­nt is at a record low, and thousands of new jobs have opened in renewable energy – making this a good time to help affected coal miners and coalplant workers move into other kinds of work. The power market, for its part, is oversuppli­ed, so a loss of coal plants would not appreciabl­y raise the price of electricit­y for consumers in the short term. —

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