The German Energiewende: A lesson for the world? Rainer Hinrichs-Rahlwes, Board Member BEE - German Renewable Energy Federation The German Energiewende.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Dokumentname > Folie 1 > Vortrag > Autor Potentials for Renewables in Europe Wolfram Krewitt DLR Institute of Technical Thermodynamics Systems.
Advertisements

Dr. Christine Wörlen July 2010 Renewable Energy Policy in Germany: A Green Jobs Success Story.
The future of energy in Germany – Towards an age of renewables
Renewable Energy Development in Germany (Status and Outlook) Rainer Hinrichs-Rahlwes, Board Member BEE - German Renewable Energy Federation Berlin, 3 rd.
2014 RENEWABLES 2014 GLOBAL STATUS REPORT CLEAN ENERGY WEEK 2014 CHRISTINE LINS Executive Secretary Sydney, 21 st July 2014.
Why low carbon development? Economic growth and development that is consistent with the transition to a carbon constrained global economy. It fits with:
Page 1 HyWays We have to act NOW for a sustainable future! Conclusions and recommendations from the HyWays project The European Hydrogen.
Kick-off Stakeholder Workshop "Post 2020 framework in a liberalised electricity market with large share of Renewable Energy Sources" 28 April 2014, Brussels.
The Energy Report © Wild Wonders of Europe / Inaki Relanzon / WWF Connecting the grid with RES Dr Stephan Singer Director Global Energy Policy WWF Brussels,
The German „Energiewende“ from a worker‘s perspective Lisa Bauch, Industriegewerkschaft Bauen-Agrar-Umwelt “The bridge to the future, a climate solution.
ENERGY POLICY FOR SUSTAINABLE GROWTH: Economic Crossroads: From Recovery to Sustainable Growth in the Baltics and EU 24 November 2011 Reinis Āboltiņš.
11 Energy Policy in Denmark MONGOLIAN ENERGY DELEGATION 9 September 2013 Danish Energy Agency.
INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY AGENCE INTERNATIONALE DE L’ENERGIE Carbon Dioxide Mitigation: The Technology Challenge Richard A. Bradley and Cedric Philibert.
Wind Power in Germany Kai Schlegelmilch German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety Division: Hydropower, Wind.
The Impact of Liberalisation on the Environmental Performance of the Electricity Sector in Germany.
1 Dr. Christo Christov Energy Institute JSCo Sofia, Bulgaria Bulgaria GHG Emission Projections - Results and Methodological Problems Dr. Christo Christov.
China’s Sustainable Energy Policy
Renewable Energies in Germany at a Glance - Focus on Geothermal Energy János Büchner, energiewaechter GmbH Consultant.
Feed-in Legislation World Future Council Nairobi 2006 Miguel Mendonca The world’s most effective environmental policy?
Energy Efficiency, IDS, F. Reul, Energy Efficiency Views of the German Confederation of Trade Unions Lunch debate on the employment potential.
1 Brendan Devlin Adviser, Markets and Infrastructure Directorate B, DG ENER European Commission.
EMPIRE- modelling the future European power system under different climate policies Asgeir Tomasgard, Christian Skar, Gerard Doorman, Bjørn H. Bakken,
Round table: COVENANT OF MAYORS (Energy policy of EU) Varna – 10th -12th September 2014.
E.ON on the Romanian Energy Market ZF Power Summit Bucharest, February 27, 2013 Frank Hajdinjak CEO E.ON România.
Options for climate friendly technologies for power generation and their related costs and potential environmental impacts Sustainable Energy Development.
© Fraunhofer ISE 2015 Headquarter of Fraunhofer ISE, Freiburg, Germany The Leading Role of Cities: The Frankfurt Energy Scenario Gerhard Stryi-Hipp Coordinator.
WIND ENERGY Is there a Latvian Master Plan? CHRISTIAN KJÆR Chief Executive Officer European Wind Energy Association SSE Riga, 4 December 2008 © EWEA/L.
Financial Executives Institute Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Canadian Environmental Policy This presentation includes forward-looking statements. Actual.
The German Electricity Market in the European context Bocconi University Karsten Neuhoff German Institute for Economic Research / Technical University.
© Prof. Dr. Georg Erdmann 1 Electricity Systems with High Renewable Energy Shares Prof. Dr. Georg Erdmann TU Berlin; Chair Energy Systems Member of the.
E R E F European Renewable Energies Federation Expectations on the EU Energy Union European Economic and Social Committee Dirk Hendricks 12 May 2015.
Tokyo, 5 September 2012 Bo Diczfalusy, Director, Directorate of Sustainable Energy Policy and Technology Markus Wråke, ETP Project Leader, Head of Energy.
Renewable Energy Policies: China’s Scale-Up Story Dr. Xiaodong Wang Senior Energy Specialist EASIN, the World Bank SDN Week, Energy Day February 23, 2012.
The renewable energy Directive by Claude Turmes, MEP Vice-President of EUFORES Rapporteur of the RES-Directive 9th Inter-Parliamentary Meeting on Renewable.
Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour German research strategy in the energy sector Georg Wilhelm Adamowitsch 7 th October Warsaw.
For our Environment „Energiewende“ Energy for the Future ! Dr. Harry Lehmann Federal Environmental Agency – Germany
Swedish Energy Policy. Relative Energy Supply coal hydro wood oil nuclear new RES.
November, 13, Bucharest, CONFERENCE”Energy towards FP7” Romanian Technology Platform “Photovoltaics”, Dan I. Teodoreanu.
Promoting Renewable Energies – in Germany and worldwide Dr. Karsten Sach at Eco Cities of the Mediterranean Forum 2008 October 20, 2008.
Energy Efficiency and Smart Grids in Germany at a Glance Jelka Schedlinsky, Project Manager at eclareon GmbH, Consultant on behalf of the Federal Ministry.
On behalf of EREC: Rainer Hinrichs-Rahlwes Vice-President of EREF Board Member of BEE (German RE Federation) IPM Madrid, 16 th April 2010.
What do we mean by “Energy?
08/12/2015 Developing renewable energy cost effectively EUROPEAN COMMISSION Tom Howes European Commission.
Climate Action Meeting the EU’s Kyoto commitments & Avoiding a gap after 2012 Doha, 27 November 2012 Paolo CARIDI Policy Coordinator DG Climate Action.
Supplying the world entirely with renewable resources Emily Rochon Greenpeace International October 27, 2015.
Presenter: Aidan Rogers. Attorney-At- Law President – Barbados Renewable Energy Association.
Sudhir Chella Rajan GERMANY’S ENERGIEWENDE – WHAT LESSONS FOR THE REST OF THE WORLD?
Dutch presidency agenda on ensuring industrial competitiveness Erik Janssen, Ministry of Economic Affairs The Netherlands.
Church Presentations By Peter Boogaart Holland, MI
HIGH LEVEL FORUM “SECURITY OF ELECTRICITY SUPPLY IN KOSOVO” ENERGY POLICY FRAMEWORK IN KOSOVO LUAN MORINA, HEAD OF DEPARTMENT FOR ENERGY PRISHTINA, MARCH,01,2016.
9 June, 2016 Energy policy in Germany – Towards a policy for sustainable and independent energy Eszter Pászti - Márkus Science and Technology Attachée.
0 Dr. Peter Frey │ SOLARVALLEY MITTELDEUTSCHLAND │ Paris, 14. April 2011 PV production in Germany - threats & opportunities Dr. Peter Frey, CEO Solar Valley.
Energy Transition – Energiewende - in Germany
© OECD/IEA Do we have the technology to secure energy supply and CO 2 neutrality? Insights from Energy Technology Perspectives 2010 Copenhagen,
Renewables: Choices and opportunity costs Prof. David Elliott The Open University.
E3G Europe’s low carbon competitiveness after COP21 Jonathan Gaventa, E3G 4 May 2016.
PANEL MODERATOR TIHOMIR SIMIĆ Chairman International Forum for Clean Energy Technologies.
21/11/2016 Renewable energy and the EU regions Kristīne Kozlova, European Commission, DG Energy 15 June 2011 EUROPEAN COMMISSION.
The vision of 100% renewable energy
RENEWABLE eNERGY AND ENERGY EFFICIENCY – GERMAN BEST PRACTICES
Energy Union: an integrated approach to R&I
International Renewable Energy Agency
KEY MESSAGES FROM WEC CESI REPORT JUST LAUNCHED
Innovation and Energy Aleksander Śniegocki
Sustainable Development Solutions Network - Greece
Rajib Das Dy GM, Planning November 5, 2017 Transition of India’s
Just Transition and Skills Requirements
Innovation in the Energy Sector: Technologies after 2030 and Necessary Policies Today Prof. Dr. Georg Erdmann, TU Berlin President, GEE e.V., Former.
The Innovation Challenge Presentation on behalf of the EU
Brandenburg’s Contribution to the “Energiewende” in Germany
Presentation transcript:

The German Energiewende: A lesson for the world? Rainer Hinrichs-Rahlwes, Board Member BEE - German Renewable Energy Federation The German Energiewende and its impact on cities and their hinterlands, Metropolitan Solutions, Berlin 22 nd of May 2015

BEE - the German Renewable Energy Federation is the umbrella organization of renewable energy in Germany, with 29 member associations and organizations representing 30,000 members, including 5,000 enterprises. Our target: 100 % Renewable Energy.

When did Energiewende begin?

4  2011: Fukushima nuclear disaster  2000: Atomkonsens (nuclear phase-out)  2000: EEG (Renewable Energy Law)  1991: StrEG (Electricity Feed-in Law)  1980s: first wind and solar support programmes  1970s: Wind and solar pioneers  Anti-nuclear movement (1960s, 1970s...) Energiewende – the Roots

What is Energiewende ?

6  Complete nuclear phase-out by 2022  Energy system based on Renewables and Efficiency  smart & flexible  Ambitious Greenhouse Gas Reductions (minus 40% by 2020, by 2050)  Logical consequence: phasing out coal  Encompassing all sectors: electricity – heating & cooling – transport Energiewende – the Rationale

7  Germany is perceived as a frontrunner for successful Renewable energy development and deployment  “EEG” (the Feed-in law) main pillar of success  Energiewende is a global brand / trademark  Share of RES-E increased 3.4%  27.8% (1990 – 2014)  growth continuing  >40 GW wind / >38 GW PV capacity end of 2014  >370,000 people employed in the RES-sector (2013)  32.9 billion € turnover from construction and operation of RES (2014) Energiewende – a success story

8 Public consensus about Energy Transition towards Renewables and phase-out of nuclear – across political parties  But: Energiewende is strongest in the power sector  Stagnating development of RES-H and RES-T  Share of RES-H increased 2.1  9.9% (1990 – 2014) – stagnating since 2011  RES-T: exponential growth (0.1%/1990  7.8%/2007) – decrease and stagnation since then  5.4%/2014  RES in TPEC increased 1.3  11.1% (1990 – 2014) – but: stagnating since 2011  Policy uncertainty and investors’ doubts – from FIT to tendering? market design? ambition level? state-aid? Not all that glitters....

Some Figures

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany : 27.8% RES-E

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany 2014 RES-E-Capacity 2014: 93.1 GW

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany 2013 Stagnation below 10% in RES-H

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany 2013 RES-H: Mostly Biomass

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany 2013 RES-T: Going down...

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany % RES in Germany

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany 2014 Investment in new RES: 18.8 bn € (2014)

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany 2013 Turnover from RES-operation: 14.1 bn € (2014)

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany 2014 Jobs in RES

Source: German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy - Renewable Energy Sources in Germany 2014 RES avoided 148 million t CO 2 eq in 2014

RES = private people and SME

A lesson for the world?

 Political will and broad societal consensus about Energiewende  First mover advantage through early action  Feed-in tariffs, priority grid access and priority dispatch for market introduction and scaling up  Accelerated learning curves through economies of scale  People’s energy: Participation and benefits across the country Pick the best...

 Taking and implementing decisions for further system transformation  New market design focussing on RES and market integration  Phase out old baseload (nuclear & coal)  Develop flexibility driven energy system (supply & demand)  Develop synergies between power, heating & cooling, transport Challenges ahead

Striving for a truly sustainable, renewables based energy system BEE - German Renewable Energy Federation Invalidenstr. 91 D Berlin Fon  0 Fax 