Germany has an ambitious plan to switch from nuclear to solar and wind.  It is 
running into problems, for businesses and residences alike.

Gene




BERLIN — It is an audacious undertaking with wide and deep support in Germany: 
shut down the nation’s nuclear power plants, wean the country from coal and 
promote a wholesale shift to renewable energy sources.

But the plan, backed by Chancellor Angela Merkel and opposition parties alike, 
is running into problems in execution that are forcing Germans to come face to 
face with the costs and complexities of sticking to their principles.

German families are being hit by rapidly increasing electricity rates, to the 
point where growing numbers of them can no longer afford to pay the bill. 
Businesses are more and more worried that their energy costs will put them at a 
disadvantage to competitors in nations with lower energy costs, and some 
energy-intensive industries have begun to shun the country because they fear 
steeper costs ahead.

FULL AT:  
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/19/world/europe/germanys-effort-at-clean-energy-proves-complex.html?pagewanted=all
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