Marin Independent Journal

Germany seeking to increase use of renewable energy, cut Russian imports

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BERLIN » The German government unveiled a major package of reforms Wednesday to boost the production of renewable power, meet its climate goals and become independen­t of energy imports from hostile nations such as Russia.

The “Easter package” approved by Cabinet lays out ambitious goals for the expansion of offshore power and declares the installati­on of renewable energy to be of “overriding public interest” — a trump card meant to cut through Germany's often lengthy bureaucrat­ic processes.

Europe's biggest economy aims to generate almost all of its electricit­y from renewable sources such as wind and solar by 2035 — more than doubling the current rate in 13 years. But the roll-out has slowed sharply in recent years due to complex rules and changes in feed-in subsidies.

“In sum, this package will lead to a significan­t increase in renewable energy,” Economy and Energy Minister Robert Habeck said.

After adding no offshore wind in 2021, the new center-left government that took power in December said Germany will increase the installed capacity from under 8 Gigawatts currently to 30GW by 2030 and 40GW by 2035. The goal for 2045 — by when Germany aims to achieve “net zero”' greenhouse gas emissions — is 70 GW of offshore wind capacity.

The government has also set a target of more than doubling onshore wind capacity to 115GW by 2030, including by reducing the minimum distance to certain radio beacons and weather radars. The goal for solar is even more ambitious: almost quadruplin­g the existing capacity to 215GW by the next decade.

Habeck acknowledg­ed the enormity of the task and said Germany will likely miss its short-term targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions due to failures of the past.

“It's the preconditi­on,” he said of the new measures, “not the solution for everything.” Further measures will be agreed in the coming months and many must be approved by parliament before they come into force.

The war in Ukraine would also affect plans, with Germany likely having to use more domestic coal to fill the short-term gap caused by a reduction in Russian energy imports, Habeck said.

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