Arab Times

Germans cautious of getting the climate bill

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HALLE, Sept 11, (AP): It’s a scorching September day and the Green party candidate hoping to succeed Angela Merkel as German chancellor leaps on stage in front of hundreds of supporters for what should be a home run.

Surveys show climate change is among the top concerns for many voters, and the audience in the eastern city of Halle is made up largely of students and retirees eager to hear how Annalena Baerbock plans to safeguard their future or that of their grandchild­ren.

The Greens have long championed the fight against global warming. Ahead of Germany’s Sept. 26 vote they offer arguably the most comprehens­ive program for making Europe’s biggest economy carbon neutral, with a mix of government incentives and penalties for polluters.

Worried

But while voters readily admit they are worried about the state of the planet, especially after the deadly floods that hit Germany in July, many are wary of committing to the kind of radical transforma­tion required - fearing the bill they might receive for it.

“The climate crisis is now,” Baerbock tells the rally. “That’s why we need to act now, in the year 2021.”

The audience responds with polite applause; a listener then asks her about people in rural areas who worry that the changes required to combat climate change - such as banning cars with combustion engines - could threaten their way of life.

Baerbock says she wants electric vehicles to be affordable for everybody within a decade, if necessary with a subsidy of up to 9,000 euros (over $10,600) for low earners, but some are skeptical.

“They don’t say enough where the money is going to come from,” said Sonja Solisch, a health care worker.

Solisch sympathize­s with the Greens’ goals but says voters like her have other worries too.

“Good train connection­s, good road connection­s, things like that need to be paid for too,” she said.

Released

A survey released Friday by public broadcaste­r ZDF found climate and environmen­t ranked as the most important election issue for 43% of respondent­s - ahead of the coronaviru­s pandemic and migration. The same poll, a representa­tive phone survey of about 1,250 voters with a margin of error of up to 3 percentage points, showed the Greens trailing the center-left Social Democrats and Merkel’s centerrigh­t Union bloc.

Steffi Lemke, a long-time Greens lawmaker, argues that the two governing parties are shying away from telling voters the brutal facts about climate change, including about the cost.

“The problem is that it will be far more expensive if we do nothing,” she told The Associated Press, citing the 30 billion euros that federal and state government­s recently agreed to spend on rebuilding western regions hit by devastatin­g flash floods this summer. “If we don’t change the economy and our society, it’s going to be unaffordab­le.”

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