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German government to unveil multi-billion-euro climate strategy

Feeling the heat from a vocal climate protest movement, German Chancellor Angela Merkel's government plans this week to unveil a multi-billion-euro grand plan for tackling global warming.

German government to unveil multi-billion-euro climate strategy
A Fridays for Future demonstration in Frankfurt on September 13th. Photo: DPA

Days before a UN climate summit in New York, Merkel's team was preparing to announce details as the top EU economy, once a green energy pioneer, is bound to miss its 2020 carbon reduction targets.

Political parties were still haggling over the details early in the week, but Berlin was likely to pledge some €40 billion over four years, newspaper Welt am Sonntag reported.

Measures proposed by Merkel's CDU party include boosting public transport services, making train travel cheaper and flying more expensive, and raising subsidies for cleaner cars and home heating systems.

A bone of contention remained how to price the emission of climate-killer CO2 into economic activity – either through a carbon tax or the trading of emissions permits, the option favoured by Merkel.

“Climate protection is a challenge for humankind,” she said in her latest weekly podcast. “We can see that climate change is already a reality. In the past 50 years, storms, heat waves and floods have also tripled in Germany.

“Germany is an industrialized country. In recent decades we have emitted a great deal of CO2 and thus contributed to global warming.”

READ ALSO: What we learned from Angela Merkel's Bundestag debate speech

'Life-destroying crisis'

At the end of Germany's second blistering summer in a row, as fear of climate change has energized especially young voters, the mainstream parties are struggling to catch up on the hot-button issue.

Merkel's government will announce its plan on Friday, a day that's expected to see the biggest international wave of climate strikes yet by the Fridays for Future movement and the hundreds of civic groups that support it.

“We are heading for a life-destroying crisis and so far nothing has happened,” said Linus Steinmetz of the student movement launched last year by Swedish teenage activist Greta Thunberg.

“That's why we're raising the pressure – together we're strong.”

Export powerhouse Germany accounts for around two percent of the worldwide emissions blamed for heating the Earth's atmosphere, melting ice caps, raising sea levels and intensifying violent weather events.

Merkel, a scientist by profession, was once known as the “climate chancellor” as she pushed forward a green energy transition that vastly increased clean renewables such as wind and solar power.

However, many of those gains have been eroded by an increased reliance on dirty coal, in part to offset the phase-out by 2022 of nuclear power that Merkel decided after Japan's 2011 Fukushima disaster.

Car-mad Germany has also lagged badly behind in the transport sector, where state-coddled auto giants VW, Daimler and BMW have long focused on gas-guzzling SUVs more than on hybrid or zero-emission electric cars.

READ ALSO: Protests against German car industry draw 25,000

'No fig leaf'

While the details of the climate plan remained hazy, Finance Minister Olaf Scholz promised a “very ambitious” package.

“I can feel the will of all coalition partners to actually achieve something that does justice to the scope of the challenge,” he said on ZDF public television.

Speaking separately to Bild am Sonntag newspaper, Scholz suggested that a switch to electric cars could be boosted with “something like a one-million-charging-station programme”.

Scholz's Social Democrats, junior coalition partners to Merkel's conservatives, have also called for a broad carbon tax, which would raise the cost of goods and services reliant on fossil fuels.

Angela Merkel at a previous IAA motor show in Frankfurt. Germany has to balance its love for cars with climate protection. Photo: DPA

Merkel's bloc has, however, resisted this, perhaps mindful of how a French plan for a climate levy helped spark the “yellow vests” protest movement.

Her party instead advocates extending the trade in right-to-pollute emission certificates to the transport and building sectors.

The climate package presents a delicate balancing act for the two mainstream parties, which have been under fire from both the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party and the ascendant Greens.

On the one hand, the anti-immigration AfD, which is strongest in the ex-communist east, rails against Merkel's government, wind energy farms and the planned closure of Germany's last coal mines.

On the other hand the Greens' popular co-leader Robert Habeck warned against any half-hearted “fig-leaf policy” on climate and demanded more concrete steps, such as a deadline for banning petrol and diesel cars.

By Frank Zeller

Member comments

  1. Merkel and her government can spend trillions of Euros on climate change but in the end it will not change the climate one bit. Climate change is a hoax.

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POLITICS

German president decries ‘violence’ in politics after attacks

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Thursday he was worried by the growing trend of violence towards politicians after a series of attacks on lawmakers at work or on the campaign trail.

German president decries 'violence' in politics after attacks

“We must never get used to violence in the battle of political opinions,” Steinmeier said at an event to mark the 75th anniversary of the German constitution.

The basic law, promulgated in 1949, was a response to Germany’s experience with political violence during World War II, Steinmeier said.

“No one knew better than the mothers and fathers of the constitution how violence undermines a democracy and tears down its foundations,” Steinmeier said.

READ ALSO: ‘Grundgesetz’ – what does Germany’s Basic Law really mean?

The threat of political violence had again reared its head in Germany, the president said.

“We have received news of physical attacks on elected officials and politically active people almost every day,” he said.

“I am deeply concerned about the coarsening of political life in our country.”

READ ALSO: How politically motivated crimes are rising in Germany 

Earlier this month, police arrested a man on suspicion of hitting a former mayor of Berlin in the head during a visit to a public library.

Franziska Giffey, who is now the Berlin state economy minister and a member of Scholz’s Social Democratic Party (SPD), was treated in hospital for light injuries.

Giffey’s assault came just days after a European member of parliament, also from the SPD, had to be hospitalised after four people attacked him while he was out canvassing.

READ ALSO: Why are German politicians facing increasing attacks?

Senior members of the government have also been confronted by angry mobs in recent months, with Economy Minister Robert Habeck blocked from leaving a ferry by a group of protesters.

In his speech, Steinmeier also recalled the politically motivated murder of the conservative politician Walter Luebcke by neo-Nazis in 2019.

“His death is a reminder of how hate can turn into violence,” Steinmeier said.

This week also saw proceedings open against the alleged ringleaders of a group who are said to have planned to storm the German parliament and overthrow the government.

The group of so-called Reichsbuerger, who deny the legitimacy of the modern German republic, allegedly planned to take MPs hostage and had compiled “lists of enemies” to be eliminated, according to prosecutors.

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