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Germany seeks to double renewables capacity in 8 years

By ANGUS MCNEICE in London | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2022-04-15 09:11
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Workers install solar panels on a floating photovoltaic power plant on Lake Silbersee in Haltern am See, Germany, on Tuesday. THILO SCHMUELGEN/REUTERS

New German legislation promises to expedite the country's green energy transition by doubling renewable power capacity over the next eight years, and achieving 100 percent green electricity supply by 2035.

The nation's federal government has submitted a draft of its so-called Easter Package, which is a bundle of legislative measures aimed at developing renewables, including reforms to the country's Renewable Energy Sources Act and its Offshore Wind Energy Act.

The Ukraine crisis has added extra impetus to the renewable energy transition, since Germany burns natural gas for around 15 percent of its electricity, with Russia as its main supplier.

Finance Minister Christian Lindner recently referred to renewable power as "freedom energy".

Highlighting the need for reform, German Vice-Chancellor Robert Habeck said at a news conference that the "climate crisis is coming to a head" and that the conflict in Ukraine "shows how important it is to phase out fossil fuels and promote the expansion of renewables".

The new legislation aims to increase the share of renewables in Germany's energy mix from around 42 percent in 2021 to 80 percent in 2030. The package also commits Germany to sourcing all of its electricity from renewables by 2035. Previously, the German government had said this would be achieved "before 2040".

Wind energy will play a large part in the transition, with the aim of reaching 30 gigawatts of installed offshore wind capacity by 2030, and at least 70 gigawatts by 2045.

Onshore wind capacity is set to reach 115 gigawatts in 2030, according to the new legislation, compared to the current 56 gigawatts.

Germany currently has around 7.7 gigawatts of installed offshore wind capacity, in third place behind the United Kingdom and China, though development has slowed in recent years.

The nation added 219 megawatts of offshore wind power in 2020, with no offshore wind turbines added last year. Germany also issued fewer onshore wind permits in the first quarter of this year than in the same period last year.

The package was largely welcomed by green energy industry players and environmentalists.

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