Germany cuts carbon emissions. Not fast enough, young generation says.
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| Berlin
Joelle Sander had expected no more than 200 people at the climate strike she organized in September in her hometown of Wiesbaden as part of a global youth-led event. It took place two days before Germany鈥檚 federal election, the first in 16 years without Angela Merkel on the ballot.
That day, 2,000 strikers showed up in Wiesbaden. 鈥淪o much is finally happening after two years of corona. The global strike gave me hope that people still care about climate action, and that our future isn鈥檛 dead,鈥 says Ms. Sander, an 18-year-old vegetarian.
In the German capital, around 100,000 climate marchers streamed toward the Bundestag, clogging up car traffic. 鈥淕ermany is the fourth largest emitter of carbon dioxide in history, and that with a population of 80 million people,鈥 Greta Thunberg, the Swedish climate activist who had traveled to Berlin for the strike, told a crowd. Across Germany, more than 600,000 people gathered on Sept. 24 at various climate events, say organizers.
Why We Wrote This
Germany aims to help Europe lead toward a greener future, yet it still burns lots of coal. Now a young generation is demanding to see goals matched by actions.
As the election showed, Germany鈥檚 climate-conscious young generation finally has the political wind at its back: First-time voters overwhelmingly cast ballots for two smaller political parties, whose platforms promised bold climate action. Both parties are now set to join a new coalition government.
This comes on the heels of a historic decision in April by Germany鈥檚 Federal Constitutional Court, which ruled that the government鈥檚 existing climate action law was 鈥渋nsufficient鈥 and 鈥渧iolate[s] the freedoms of the complainants, some of whom are very young.鈥
Those complainants were mostly youth activists who are enraged that politicians and leaders were doing so little to protect the Earth, and hence their future. Their movement now attracts people of all backgrounds, not just youths like Ms. Sander who shun meat-eating and car ownership. 鈥淕randmas and grandpas and parents and scientists and teachers are joining, because the climate crisis has gone so far people are dying and they鈥檙e now concerned about their children鈥檚 future,鈥 she says.
There has been much to protest about Germany鈥檚 climate action, or lack thereof. Its clean energy transition has been fitful, with an abrupt phaseout of nuclear power and a reliance on coal that鈥檚 been tough to shake. Yet the future is looking brighter under a climate-focused coalition government at a time when German youths and consumers are engaged like never before with the goal of going green.
Compared to European peers that have installed more renewables, 鈥渋n absolute numbers these countries are definitely ahead,鈥 says J枚rn C.听Richstein, thematic lead of electricity markets research at the German Institute for Economic Research鈥檚 climate policy department. 鈥淏ut if you look back at where Germany was in the 1990s, we鈥檝e made real progress.鈥
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Net-zero by 2045?
Germany was among the first major economies to pass a law to mandate a hard exit from coal. The government has also set a target of 2045 for net-zero output of greenhouse gases and a near-term target of cutting emissions by 65% by the end of this decade, compared with 1990 levels.
Still, its coal phaseout target of 2038 is much slower than that of France or the United Kingdom, the host of this week鈥檚 United Nations climate conference, which has urged countries to stop burning coal, one of the dirtiest energy sources.
And turning Germany鈥檚 words into action has so far been a challenge. To achieve a clean-energy transition it needs the right mix of renewables, buy-in from consumers to politicians and industry executives, and changes in the regulatory framework for carbon-intensive industries and for bringing renewable energies on board. All this in a country that plans to mothball its nuclear power stations by next year.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a tremendous task, and we have to do nearly everything possible in the coming years,鈥 says Matthias Zelinger, head of the Competence Center Climate & Energy for VDMA, an engineering industry association.
Cutting Germany鈥檚 total emissions by 65% compared with 1990 levels by 2030 requires nothing less than a 鈥渇undamental restructuring of our energy system, international energy supply, building and vehicle stock, infrastructure, and large parts of industry,鈥 according to a recent . Investment in fossil-fuel related technologies must end, along with a faster stop to coal-fired power. All this would require additional public and private investment of about 860 billion euros by 2030 (nearly $1 trillion) or about 2.5% of Germany鈥檚 gross domestic product, the report found.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a lot of money,鈥 says Mr. Zelinger. 鈥淥n the other hand, it is less than we鈥檝e invested in the merger of [post-1989] Germany, east and west. So it鈥檚 our generation鈥檚 project. It鈥檚 hard, but it鈥檚 not undoable. We have to be fast and efficient.鈥
Why progress is slow
Many experts mark Ms. Merkel鈥檚 decision to phase out nuclear power in 2011 after the Fukushima disaster in Japan as the beginning of Germany鈥檚 energy transition. The previous year, she鈥檇 supported extending the working lives of nuclear plants. Her about-turn, which reflected public opinion on the perceived risk of nuclear power, delivered a boost to renewables like solar and wind. But Germany also became more reliant on coal and natural gas to generate electricity for its homes and factories because renewables didn鈥檛 ramp up fast enough.
This lack of progress is maddening for young activists like Ronja Weil, a student in Berlin who鈥檚 affiliated with Gerechtigkeitjetzt (Justice Now), a Berlin-based alliance of 27 initiatives that campaign for climate-friendly policies. 鈥淚 think that actually the government does not execute climate protection at all. We have to change systematic factors and ask ourselves questions such as 鈥楬ow do we want to produce energy?鈥欌 says Ms. Weil.
Adding onshore wind turbines can be challenging: It takes 3 to 5 years for regulatory approval, so project developers often prefer offshore wind sites or look overseas. In 2018, Germany installed about 750 onshore wind turbines; even fewer were added in 2019 and 2020. Opposition from some citizen groups, whose members skew older than climate strikers, has stymied approvals. Opponents say wind turbines are eyesores and not the right renewable option. 听
Solar and wind together generated more electricity . But coal use has resurged this year amid a global spike in natural-gas prices and a fall in wind output.
鈥淒o small things, [and] big things can be moved鈥
The April high court ruling was in response to several legal challenges filed mostly by young plaintiffs, including Luisa Neubauer, one of the national organizers of the Sept. 24 rallies. They alleged that Germany鈥檚 and the European Union鈥檚 commitments under the 2015 Paris Agreement wouldn鈥檛 prevent future global warming and as a result violated their human rights since they would suffer the consequences in the future.
鈥淭he constitutional court ruled that society and politicians have to speed up the fight against climate change, and we have to tighten and accelerate measures quickly,鈥 says Dirk Janssen, director of the North-Rhine Westphalia division of Friends of the Earth Germany.
In response to the ruling, Parliament agreed on deeper emissions cuts by 2030 and moved up its net-zero target to 2045, five years ahead of the EU. Industries are also making progress, rolling out pilot programs for decarbonizing even highly polluting sectors such as chemicals and cement, says Mr. Zelinger.
鈥淢ore and more industries are now even drawing up their own roadmaps on how to decarbonize,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd the new coalition government will go further.鈥
Changing the way progress is evaluated to include future measures will help this process, says Dr. Richstein. Take steel manufacturing, on which Germany鈥檚 renowned auto industry depends. Installing a low-carbon blast furnace is expensive, and can鈥檛 be done in stages. 鈥淵ou basically need to replace the whole thing at once and then you have a clean process. A lot of these sorts of binary decisions are needed across sectors, and in a lot of cases it鈥檚 single installations that account for most emissions in industrial processes. That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 good to track progress based on these early indicators where you say, how far are we in different sectors with replacing old with new processes?鈥
Germany can no longer ignore the consequences of global warming, says Mr. Janssen of Friends of the Earth Germany, given summer heat waves, drought-ravaged forests, and the deadly summer floods in 2021.
鈥淧eople can see that climate change is here,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his means environmental NGOs are no longer fighting the fight alone. Germany鈥檚 climate movement today is a broad church, from civil disobedience groups to the more well-heeled, middle-class supporters. It鈥檚 the energy companies and politics that are way behind, so much so that we worry that the efforts to implement the energy transition may amount to too few, too late.鈥
Ms. Sander, the climate strike organizer, is hopeful for the new coalition that includes the Green Party, but worries that government will still move too slowly. She鈥檚 working to train more activists to bring even younger voices into the movement. 鈥淚f 100 million people do small things, big things can be moved.鈥