When the coalition government comprising the center-left , and neoliberal emerged after the last German federal election in the fall of 2021, incoming Chancellor (SPD) did not object to being called the “Climate Chancellor.” That was no surprise: the climate crisis had been a top issue during the election campaign.
The new government made the fight against climate change a task for the economy ministry and appointed Vice-Chancellor from the Greens as its head.
Three and a half years later, campaign speeches barely mention climate protection. The dominant issues are how to curb irregular immigration and how to boost Germany’s sluggish economy.
Skeptical view of renewable energy
The head of the center-right , — who, according to the polls, is most likely to become the next German chancellor — has often said that Germany’s approximately 29,000 electricity-generating wind turbines are a thorn in his side.
In November 2024, Merz told public broadcaster ZDF, “I even believe that if we do things right, we can one day dismantle the wind turbines again — because they are ugly.”
The CDU/CSU bloc believes in nuclear fusion as an energy source, although technological development in this field has stagnated for decades. Last year, electricity generation from renewable sources such as solar and wind accounted for around 56% of German energy production.
Merz, however, also wants to revive nuclear power plants, the last of which went offline in 2023. The country’s goal of reducing greenhouse gases by 65% by 2030, compared to 1990 levels, is not part of the CDU/CSU’s plans.
“The fact that the escalating climate crisis is not among the parties’ top three issues in this election campaign is incomprehensible and irresponsible,” Martin Kaiser, a climate expert with the environmental organization Greenpeace, told DW. “Because right now, we need a consistent and socially-oriented climate policy.”
Oil and gas from the US
Recently, the environmental group was appalled when German Chancellor Scholz expressed approval of importing oil and liquefied gas from the US in an interview with the German newspaper Handelsblatt Scholz, arguing that increasing imports would lower energy prices.
However, Heike Vesper, one of the managing directors of WWF Germany, said, “More oil and gas on the world market would only mean one thing: fueling the climate crisis. The consequences would be damage costing billions — and an unstable economy.”
Climate protection remains one of the Greens’ central concerns.
“I find it negligent that the other parties are now arguing against climate protection,” Environment Minister Steffi Lemke of the Greens told DW. “We know that we need climate protection and adaptation to climate change.”
Climate policy setbacks
Kaiser, the Greenpeace expert, believes the climate balance of the now defunct German government coalition of SPD, Greens and FDP is sobering. He said that the response to and to the Constitutional Court’s ruling that led to a cut in the budget massively damaged confidence especially in the government’s climate policies.
In November 2023, ($62 billion) of funds it had earmarked for climate protection. That fund had originally been allocated to combatting the economic effect of the pandemic, but the court ruled that reallocating the funds for a different purpose was not possible.
In response to that ruling, the government cut, among other things, a purchase premium for electric cars, which led sales to fall.
In 2023, Economy Minister Habeck’s plans for a new law to phase out fossil fuel heating systems were leaked. It stipulated that starting in 2024, heating systems in new buildings should be powered by renewable energies. This law was debated passionately for months by the government and the public, and was mitigating the cost on individual households. Habeck and his Green Party saw their approval ratings fall.
Kaiser added that the FDP-led ministries of Transport and Construction also failed to develop measures to reduce CO2 emissions. He said that their partners from the SPD and Greens let them get away with it, fearing that otherwise, the coalition may break apart.
In the election campaign before the February 23 vote, climate protection has taken a back seat despite frequent reports of storms and flood disasters linked to climate change and the rapid rise in temperatures and sea levels worldwide.
“Whenever the next extreme weather event occurs — the next flood in Bavaria, for example — then we will again realize that it is all happening very close to home,” Lisa Badum, a climate expert for the Greens parliamentary group in the Bundestag, Germany’s lower house of parliament, pointed out.
“When we look at the international stage and see that Donald Trump has withdrawn from the UN climate agreement — it is ever more important that Europe moves forward. And that won’t happen without Germany.”
This article was originally written in German.
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