In the media: Germany's top polluters; fracking angst
Handelsblatt
Fracking law: 鈥淕erman Angst鈥
There is no rational explanation for the resistance against fracking among German parliamentarians, Thomas Sigmund writes in an opinion piece for the Handelsblatt. The government proposal is looking to largely prohibit fracking but this is not enough for the opponents of drilling 鈥 they are obsessed by a complete ban. Nobody wants to endanger our drinking water resources, but it should at least be possible to assess the potential of shale gas exploitation in Germany, argues Sigmund. Instead, typical 鈥淕erman Angst鈥 hampers progress and economic prosperity. This risk aversion means a disadvantage for Germany as a business location, Sigmund says.
Read a 麻豆无码版 article on the fracking law proposal here.
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Deutschlandfunk
Fracking law: 鈥淩esponsible looks different鈥
A law proposal has rarely caused as much discomfort as the fracking bill, Theo Geers comments in the Deutschlandfunk. To ban a technology and then grant permission through loopholes in the law unsettles many people, he says. This is why the law should be tightened with the protection of drinking water as the Leitmotiv. The envisioned expert commission will not be elected democratically, and its members won鈥檛 have to decide unanimously when permitting risky fracking projects 鈥 something that should be paramount, Geers argues. The government has fallen for the industry's arguments, which claim that domestic gas resources can make Germany more independent from Russia. But apart from the risk for water resources, fracking would only serve as a short respite before Germany鈥檚 natural gas deposits are exhausted anyway.
See the op-ed in German .
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Sandbag/businessGreen
鈥4 out of 5 largest EU emitters are German lignite power stations鈥
For the first time since the start of the EU鈥檚 Emissions Trading System (ETS), four of the five largest CO2 emitters are German lignite power stations, according to an analysis of by British non-profit organisation . Three of the plants are owned by German utility RWE and one by Swedish operator Vattenfall. Of the top ten European polluters, six are German. Because emissions in other countries fell faster than in Germany last year, 鈥淕erman lignite emissions are forming an increasing proportion of EU power sector emissions - up from 11 percent in 2010, to 13 percent in 2014鈥, according to Sandbag, who calculated German lignite emissions in 2014 were still four percent above 2010 levels.
Total greenhouse gas emissions policed by the ETS fell almost five percent despite economic growth of 1.3 percent, reports . According to a an analysis of the preliminary EU data by Bloomberg, pollution from the 12,000 installations in the ETS dropped 4.9 percent to 1,816 million tonnes, which suggests the EU last year already met its 20 percent carbon reduction target for 2020, according to the article.
Read the Sandbag analysis in English . 听
Find the businessGreen article in English .
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Zeit Online
鈥淪ave the Energiewende!鈥
Germany鈥檚 energy transition is increasingly turning into a 鈥渢echnocratic monster鈥, writes Fritz Vorholz in a commentary for Zeit Online. 鈥淭here is not much left from the collective national effort once proclaimed by Angela Merkel.鈥 This is because the project has become so complicated that most people simply no longer understand it, argues Vorholz. The Energiewende 鈥済ets lost in petty little details and existing problems are being mended with ever more elaborate and finely-tuned regulations.鈥 Vorholz demands brave and determined reforms to bring Germany鈥檚 鈥Man to the Moon鈥-project back on track. 鈥淧oliticians of the Energiewende, come to your senses! Summon up your courage and don鈥檛 make the project unnecessarily complicated. Otherwise, you will find yourselves deserted soon鈥, concludes Vorholz. 听听听
Read the commentary in German .