• @[email protected]
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      206 months ago

      Wissing to be honest. The transport sector is the only one to miss the target badly. Funnily enough 15billion€ is about as much as is currently missing to fix up the German railway network. As in fix it, not expand it.

      • @[email protected]
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        96 months ago

        Lindner trying to keep the Schuldenbremse no matter what doesn’t help either. Spending money on fighting climate change now could mitigate some of the climate change damages in future, but I guess it’s more important to save every possible cent now… 🤷

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          Future citizens will live in a total shithole, but at least they are less indebted.

  • @[email protected]
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    196 months ago

    Thats so surprising. Merkel doing absolutely nothing for 16 years did not just fuck up digitization, infrastructure, healthcare, schools but also the climate? Who could have guessed.

  • @[email protected]
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    126 months ago

    This is using the German projection reports from the UBA, which is a ministry run by the Greens. Those tend to be overly negative. Last years report projected a rise of German emissions by a few percent, what happened was a drop of 10%. This year they again project rising emissions, but the Q1 data shows a 6.6% drop in emissions, with Q2 electricity data also looking rather decent. Even so the report finds most sectors will be within emission limits. The only ones with problems are buidling, which is mainly heating, and transport. The building sector is projected to be slighly over the emission targets, with some rather important laws having been passed last year, which according to the report close the gap to 96Mt to 32Mt until 2030. Transport is doing much worse however. The gap is massive at 180Mt until 2030 and most laws, which would have a large impact being blocked. To be fair the gap is smaller then the projection from last year at 210Mt.

    Point is, that this is pessimistic. However climate change is a massive issue and obviously doing more to cut emissions is the right thing to do.

    • @[email protected]
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      66 months ago

      The take from the title that Germany and Italy tops the statistic for Europe is still (partly) true. UK is still slightly worse than Italy.

      By capita it’s Luxembourg, Estonia and Iceland, but only due to low population. Their totals are pretty far down the lists.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 months ago

        WTF are you talking about? This is about the Effort Sharing Regulation(ESR), which requires EU members to lower emissions compared to 2005 depending on how rich they are(richer countries need to do more). The UK is therefore not part of this at all, as it is no longer an EU member. Neither is Iceland btw.

          • @[email protected]
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            66 months ago

            Please read the article and not just the title. It is only about the EU and European is used like American is used for the US. Technically not true, but often used in more casual speech and by lower quality news sources.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    56 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The European Union is at risk of missing its ambitious climate goals for 2030, and Germany and Italy are largely to blame.

    There’s just one problem: Germany and Italy could eat up the majority of credits available across the EU, setting up a costly bidding war by other countries that also miss their climate goals.

    “Germany and Italy are eating up all available carbon credits from their neighbours, leaving them stranded and at risk of legal proceedings,” Sofie Defour, climate director at T&E, said in a statement.

    An EU climate law, known as the Effort Sharing Regulation, sets binding emissions reduction targets for each of the bloc’s 27 countries.

    Attempts by countries including Germany, Italy, and France to slash emissions from agriculture and transportation have sparked protests by farmers and citizens worried they will push up the costs and make EU products more expensive than imports.

    Defour said countries face a choice: pay billions to their neighbors for their carbon debt or implement stronger climate policies, such as insulating houses to make them more energy efficient.


    The original article contains 355 words, the summary contains 176 words. Saved 50%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • @[email protected]
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      336 months ago

      No. Coal in general is in decline in Germany despite the shutdown of nuclear power plants. Some coal power plants were reactivated in 2022 to cover the shortage of gas, but at the same time the run time of the remaining nuclear power plants was extended by around 3 months. The reactivated coal power plants were shut down around the same time as the nuclear power plants.

    • @[email protected]
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      136 months ago

      While that’s true, the article says

      The two countries are so far off track of cutting greenhouse gas emissions in industries like transportation and buildings

    • @[email protected]
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      86 months ago

      Bullshit. The usage of coal in Germany is going steadily down and all German coal power plants will be phased out until 2035.