http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/06/07-5

Published on Tuesday, June 7, 2011 by Earth Island Journal

German Utilities Push Back on Merkel's Plan to Phase Out Nukes

by Tina Gerhardt

Berlin, Germany - German Chancellor Angela Merkel signed off today on 
a bill phasing out all nuclear energy in Germany by the end of 2022, 
underscoring the economic and environmental benefits of this shift.

Merkel had announced the decision last Monday (May 30) after more 
than 100,000 people protested nuclear energy in over 20 cities across 
Germany on May 28. In Berlin alone, over 20,000 demonstrated.

Merkel's decision marks a reversal of her previous policy. Last fall, 
she had announced that she would extend the life span of nuclear 
plants by 12 years on average.

Yet in the face of the Fukushima Daichi Nuclear Power Plant disaster 
in Japan in March and increasing and widespread public opposition to 
nuclear energy in Germany, she changed her mind, announcing that 
German would take the seven oldest of its 17 nuclear power plants off 
the grid for three months, conduct a safety review of its nuclear 
power plants and review its energy policy.

A precedent for her most recent nuclear policy had been set in 2000, 
when the Alliance 90/The Greens - a coalition government of the 
Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Green Party - decided to phase 
out nuclear power plants by 2020.

Germany's four leading nuclear-producing energy firms - Eon, RWE, 
EnBw and Swedish-based Vattenfall - have cried foul. RWE has already 
filed a lawsuit against the German government's prior three-month 
moratorium.

Eon is also considering filing a lawsuit against the continuation of 
the nuclear fuel tax. The tax was introduced as a part of austerity 
measures ratified last year. It will raise funds to help the German 
government reduce its public debt. When Merkel announced her decision 
to phase out nuclear energy last week, she stated that the nuclear 
fuel tax would remain on the books, increasing the ire of the four 
leading energy firms.

The four energy firms furthermore warn that Germany could face 
widespread winter blackouts if Merkel phases out nuclear power. But a 
recent study conducted by German Watch challenges that argument.

Merkel's decision marks a major shift in nuclear energy policy that 
could have worldwide implications, given that Germany is the largest 
developed country to phase out nuclear energy and is the world's 
fifth largest consumer of nuclear energy in terms of megawatts 
consumed, after the US, France, Japan and Russia.

Merkel is not alone in her retreat from nuclear energy. Just a week 
prior to Germany's decision, after anti-nuclear demonstrations of 
20,000 people, Switzerland, too, decided to shelve plans to continue 
nuclear energy.

The country's five existing reactors will remain in operation until 
the end of their lifespan, with the last one being decommissioned in 
2034. Nuclear energy provides about 40 percent of Switzerland's 
current energy, needs that Switzerland states will be met by 
increased renewable energy.

And in Italy, too, a referendum on nuclear energy stands before the 
voters. Following the Chernobyl disaster in 1987, Italy shut down its 
four nuclear power plants. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi reversed 
this decision in 2008.

Although Berlusconi, too, announced a moratorium on his plans for new 
nuclear power plants in response to Fukushima, he intended to carry 
out the construction of new plants. Yet last week, the Italian 
Appeals Courts announced that elections will take place this weekend, 
on June 12 and 13, with a referendum on Berlusconi's nuclear power on 
the ballots.

Later this month, June 28-29, the first European regulatory 
conference will take place to discuss safety regulations and also the 
challenges the nuclear industry in Europe will face over the next 10 
years.

Merkel's decision raises some vital questions. How will Germany phase 
out nuclear energy? What will pick up the slack? How much will 
renewable energy expand? How quickly? And who will pay?

Currently, according to the International Energy Agency, Germany's 
energy breaks down as follows for 2009: 35 percent oil; 23 percent 
coal; 22 percent gas; 11 percent nuclear; 9 percent renewable sources.

Germany's electricity, according to the German Ministry of 
Environment (Bundeministerium für Umwelt, BMU), breaks down as 
follows for 2009: 50 percent coal; 23 percent nuclear; 17 percent 
renewable sources; 10 percent natural gas.

The answers to many of the questions about how Germany will 
transition away from nuclear energy can be found in Germany's "Energy 
Concept for an Environmentally Sound, Reliable and Affordable Energy 
Supply," unveiled last September, in which the government laid out 
its energy policy for the period up to 2050.

Through this new energy policy, Germany intends to cut greenhouse gas 
emissions by 40 percent by 2020 and by 80 percent by 2050, with 1990 
being the base year for both measurements.

To achieve these reductions, Germany will ramp up renewable energy 
sources. Its new energy policy says "renewable sources are to account 
for the biggest share in this future energy mix."

Renewable energy will account for 18 percent of Germany's energy by 
2020, 30 percent by 2030, 45 percent by 2040, and 60 percent by 2050.

With regards to electricity, renewable energy sources will generate 
35 percent of electricity by 2020; 50 percent by 2030; 65 percent by 
2040; and 80 percent by 2050.

In order to reduce overall electricity consumption, buildings will be 
renovated and upgraded to increase efficiency.

Additionally, wind energy will play an increasingly key role in 
electricity generation. Onshore and offshore wind power will be 
expanded.

According to the Oeko-Institut (the Institute for Applied Ecology) 
the amount of electricity derived from renewable energy in Germany 
could even be doubled from its intended rate of 18 percent to 35 
percent by 2020. 

In an interview with Earth Island Journal, Jan Burck, Senior Adviser 
for Climate Change Performance, Germanwatch, upped the ante, saying, 
"renewable energy could even reach 40-45 percent by 2020. It is 
entirely a question of what one funds."

Which raises an important question vis-à-vis Merkel's announcement: 
Will phasing out nuclear energy and ramping up renewable energy 
increase energy costs? And if so, who pays?

The Germany Ministry of Environment's aforementioned fall 2010 
"Energy Concept" study calculated Germany's future energy costs based 
on three potential scenarios: modest, moderate, or steep price 
increases for fossil fuels. If there is a modest price increase, the 
study argues, renewable energy would become economically viable by 
2030. If there is a moderate increase in the price of fossil fuels, 
renewable energy could become competitively priced as soon as 2020.

When considering costs, it needs to be considered, Burck argues, 
"that many nuclear and coal power plants are already nearing the end 
of their lifespan and require new investments and that electricity 
grids need to be updated. So it is a question," he adds, "of whether 
one continues to invest in these power plants or shifts investments 
into renewable energy."

RWE, for example, invests in coal, gas and nuclear energy but little 
in renewable energy. This low investment rate for renewable energy 
holds true for the four big energy firms currently affected by 
Germany's nuclear phase out.

Municipal utility companies, by contrast, have been ramping up 
investments in renewable energy, mainly wind and solar. And they are 
seeing the returns for these investments.

Renewable energy is being funded through a variety mechanisms. In 
2000, Germany passed and implemented the Renewable Energy Act 
(Erneuerbare-Energien-Gesetz, EEG). It was designed to protect the 
climate and to reduce reliance on fossil fuels, while increasing 
renewable energy usage by making it cost competitive. There is no 
direct subsidy made by the government. And the industry does not pay. 
Instead, the consumer pays.

Through their monthly energy bills, consumers pay a small percentage, 
which then fund renewable energy. For a household of two person, 
these costs run about 10 ¤ ($ 14.60) per month. This guarantees a 
security of investments made. It has been particularly effective in 
allowing small and medium-sized municipal energy companies to get 
into the renewable energy market, reducing costs of producing 
renewable energy, and in turn, of consuming it.

Additionally, through a feed-in-tariffs program, consumers who 
install renewable energy, such as solar panels or a wind turbine, and 
who generate energy in excess of what they consume through these 
renewable sources, can sell the excess energy and feed it back into 
the grid, in return for compensation. According to Burck, "the 
payback of this combined system is clear, for the larger investor and 
the smaller investor."

The United States, by contrast, relies on tax credits, which are a 
notoriously fickle way to fund renewable energy, since they are not 
reliable and need to be renewed. Investors thus shy away from funding 
renewable energy to a larger extent than they would if consistent 
funding were available. Lacking funding creates a cycle, whereby 
costs are not brought down, thus consumers do not increase use.

In Germany, the feed-in-tariffs and utility taxes have led to a boom 
in renewable energy, in particular in solar energy. It is anticipated 
that the boom in renewable energy will continue until it has reached 
a peak in 2015.

Aside from costs, concerns have been raised about how Germany will 
meet its energy needs in the future. Will it have to import more 
energy? If so, what kind? Nuclear energy from France? More coal from 
Poland? More gas from Russia?

Germany, like Italy, lacks fossil fuels, so Germany already imports 
80 percent of its energy. Currently, most of its electricity is 
generated through coal and nuclear energy. Germany's coal is 
primarily imported from Poland. Since Germany does not have uranium - 
needed to produce nuclear energy - it, too, is imported.

The amount of Germany's electricity generated through natural gas and 
renewable energy is increasing. Most of Germany's gas currently comes 
from Russia. Most of its renewable energy, such as solar and wind, is 
generated domestically, through onshore and offshore wind farms. 
Germany's attempt to ramp up its renewable energy is thus also 
intended to provide Germany with energy security.

Germany is also ramping up its domestic renewable energy industry, 
particularly the wind sector, since it is a job producer. According 
to Germany's Ministry of Environment, "approximately 300,500 jobs 
have been created in the renewable energy sector over the past years. 
About 87,000 people are currently employed in the wind energy sector 
alone."

Could Germany's retooling prove useful for rethinking US energy 
policy? Last month, German and US energy experts met in Berlin for 
the 3rd German American Energy Conference. According to Katherina 
Reiche, press secretary for Germany's Federal Ministry for the 
Environment, ""Germany and the United States are facing the same 
energy policy challenges. Both countries have to modernize their 
energy systems and make them more efficient." The countries discussed 
political and technological approaches to re-tooling energy.

Germany derives 11 percent of its energy from nuclear energy, while 
the US gets 9 percent of its energy from nuclear energy, according to 
the US Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration. 
Regarding electricity, Germany draws on nuclear energy for 22 percent 
of its electricity needs, while the U.S. draws on nuclear energy for 
20 percent of its needs.

If Germany can manage a retool given a reliance on nuclear energy 
comparable to that of the US, then what is stopping the US from 
phasing out nuclear energy and seriously ramping up renewable energy?

© 2011 Earth Island Institute

Tina Gerhardt is an independent journalist who covers climate change, 
international negotiations and energy policy. Her work has appeared 
in Common Dreams, Alternet, Grist, Environment News Service, In These 
Times, The Progressive and The Nation, on GRIT tv, WBAI and the 
National Radio Project.


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