Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Germany looks to step up coal exit timetable

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN (AFP) - Germany could end electricit­y generation from coal in 2035, three years earlier than planned, under a pact sealed yesterday as Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government faces growing pressure to take climate action.

Merkel and premiers from Saxony-anhalt, Saxony, North Rhine-westphalia and Brandenbur­g agreed overnight a “shutdown plan” for the country’s power plants using the highly polluting fossil fuel, her spokesman Steffen Seibert said in a statement.

Until now, Berlin had named 2038 as the latest possible date to power down the final coal-fired generators.

Under the new plan, reviews in 2026 and 2029 will examine “whether the moment to shut down the plants can be brought forward by three years,” Seibert said.

“Germany is taking big steps on its way out of the fossil fuel age,” finance minister Olaf Scholz told reporters in Berlin.

For plants set to fall off the grid in the 2020s alone, the government will compensate operators to the tune of 4.35 billion euros (US$ 4.9 billion), Scholz said.

The payouts “will be spread out over the 15 years following the shutdown” and represent an “affordable and in my view good result,” Scholz added.

Meanwhile the deal would also spare the Hambach forest, an ancient wood in western Germany threatened by the expansion of a vast open-pit brown coal mine that became the focus of mass protests by environmen­talists.

But Thursday’s deal did not go far enough for protest group Ende Gelaende, which organised many of the ‘Hambi stays’ demonstrat­ions.

“Exiting coal is not a technical challenge, but a question of political will 2035 is much too late!” the group tweeted.

Ministers now plan to propose a draft law on the exit from coal “in January” and pass it “in the first half of 2020”.

Germany is under pressure to clarify how it plans to accelerate its “energy transition” away from fossil fuels and towards renewables, with a target to generate 65 percent from carbonneut­ral sources by 2030.

Over the same period, Berlin aims to reduce output of greenhouse gases by 55 percent compared with 1990’s levels - a goal agreed last year under pressure from demonstrat­ors like the worldwide “Fridays for Future” movement.

But the task has been complicate­d by Merkel’s decision to end nuclear power generation by 2022, leaving coal as the main backstop to renewables during the transition period.

The dirty fuel currently powers around one-third of the country’s electricit­y.

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