Successful climate protection via rapid coal phaseout in Germany and North Rhine-Westphalia

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschung

Standard

Successful climate protection via rapid coal phaseout in Germany and North Rhine-Westphalia. / Göke, Leonard; Kittel, Martin; Kemfert, Claudia et al.
in: DIW Weekly Report, Jahrgang 8, Nr. 33, 2018, S. 301-311.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschung

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{ba4be3fa54ee4f4eb29a32ec3e0855d6,
title = "Successful climate protection via rapid coal phaseout in Germany and North Rhine-Westphalia",
abstract = "Power generation from lignite and hard coal was responsible for more than a quarter of German greenhouse gas emissions in 2016. Of all federal states, North Rhine-Westphalia is by far the largest carbon emitter. The Growth, Structural Change and Regional Development Commission (also known as 'Coal Commission') among others are currently debating alternative pathways toward a coal phaseout to achieve the national climate targets. The Coal Commission has been tasked with submitting specific recommendations by the end of 2018. Supported by detailed model calculations, the present study shows that a rapid reduction in coal-fired power generation nationwide and in North Rhine-Westphalia is necessary to meet the climate targets in 2030. According to the German government's climate protection plan, emissions in the energy sector must fall by about 60 percent as compared to 1990. The analysis also shows that a German phaseout promotes decarbonization and the expansion of renewable energies throughout Europe. And in North Rhine-Westphalia, a rapid coal phaseout will be necessary to meet the climate protection targets. All lignite power plants and many plants that run on hard coal could be shut down by 2030. The phaseout of lignite mining in NRW could be designed such that surface mine Garzweiler II would no longer engulf any villages; the forest in the Hambach surface mine that is worth conserving would also be saved.",
keywords = "Economics, coal, climate protection, Germany, North Rhine Westphalia, Europe",
author = "Leonard G{\"o}ke and Martin Kittel and Claudia Kemfert and Casimir Lorenz and Pao-Yu Oei and Hirschhausen, {Christian von}",
year = "2018",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
pages = "301--311",
journal = "DIW Weekly Report",
issn = "2568-7697",
publisher = "Deutsches Institut f{\"u}r Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW)",
number = "33",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Successful climate protection via rapid coal phaseout in Germany and North Rhine-Westphalia

AU - Göke, Leonard

AU - Kittel, Martin

AU - Kemfert, Claudia

AU - Lorenz, Casimir

AU - Oei, Pao-Yu

AU - Hirschhausen, Christian von

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Power generation from lignite and hard coal was responsible for more than a quarter of German greenhouse gas emissions in 2016. Of all federal states, North Rhine-Westphalia is by far the largest carbon emitter. The Growth, Structural Change and Regional Development Commission (also known as 'Coal Commission') among others are currently debating alternative pathways toward a coal phaseout to achieve the national climate targets. The Coal Commission has been tasked with submitting specific recommendations by the end of 2018. Supported by detailed model calculations, the present study shows that a rapid reduction in coal-fired power generation nationwide and in North Rhine-Westphalia is necessary to meet the climate targets in 2030. According to the German government's climate protection plan, emissions in the energy sector must fall by about 60 percent as compared to 1990. The analysis also shows that a German phaseout promotes decarbonization and the expansion of renewable energies throughout Europe. And in North Rhine-Westphalia, a rapid coal phaseout will be necessary to meet the climate protection targets. All lignite power plants and many plants that run on hard coal could be shut down by 2030. The phaseout of lignite mining in NRW could be designed such that surface mine Garzweiler II would no longer engulf any villages; the forest in the Hambach surface mine that is worth conserving would also be saved.

AB - Power generation from lignite and hard coal was responsible for more than a quarter of German greenhouse gas emissions in 2016. Of all federal states, North Rhine-Westphalia is by far the largest carbon emitter. The Growth, Structural Change and Regional Development Commission (also known as 'Coal Commission') among others are currently debating alternative pathways toward a coal phaseout to achieve the national climate targets. The Coal Commission has been tasked with submitting specific recommendations by the end of 2018. Supported by detailed model calculations, the present study shows that a rapid reduction in coal-fired power generation nationwide and in North Rhine-Westphalia is necessary to meet the climate targets in 2030. According to the German government's climate protection plan, emissions in the energy sector must fall by about 60 percent as compared to 1990. The analysis also shows that a German phaseout promotes decarbonization and the expansion of renewable energies throughout Europe. And in North Rhine-Westphalia, a rapid coal phaseout will be necessary to meet the climate protection targets. All lignite power plants and many plants that run on hard coal could be shut down by 2030. The phaseout of lignite mining in NRW could be designed such that surface mine Garzweiler II would no longer engulf any villages; the forest in the Hambach surface mine that is worth conserving would also be saved.

KW - Economics

KW - coal

KW - climate protection

KW - Germany

KW - North Rhine Westphalia

KW - Europe

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 8

SP - 301

EP - 311

JO - DIW Weekly Report

JF - DIW Weekly Report

SN - 2568-7697

IS - 33

ER -

Links

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Qualifizierung und Motivation von Studierenden und Hochschulabsolventen für eine Existenzgründung
  2. Was Naturwissenschaftsdidaktiken und Religionspädagogik voneinander über Inklusion lernen können
  3. Competition response of European beech Fagus sylvatica L. varies with tree size and abiotic stress
  4. Evaluating the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of web-based indicated prevention of major depression
  5. Health literacy and mental health of school principals. Results from a German cross-sectional survey
  6. Internationale Hochschulpartnerschaften - Förderung nachhaltiger Entwicklung und Globalen Lernens ?
  7. Selbsteinschätzungen zum Sozial- und Lernverhalten von Grundschulkindern der vierten Jahrgangsstufe
  8. Unterrichtshandeln von Lehrkräften und Schülern verbessern durch Förderung emotionaler Kompetenzen
  9. Efficacy and cost-effectiveness of a web-based and mobile stress-management intervention for employees
  10. Zum Verbalisierungsdilemma bei der Erfassung der situationsspezifischen Fähigkeiten von Lehrkräften.
  11. Bauteilgetrieben Montagesteuerung und Fabrikstrukturierung durch Nutzung Gentelligenter Technologie
  12. Practical critique: Bridging the gap between critical and practice oriented REDD+ research communities’
  13. Discussion Report: The Proposal for a Directive on the Single-Member Private Limited Liability Company
  14. Entwicklungsverläufe im Lesen-und Schreibenlernen in Abhängigkeit verschiedener didaktischer Konzepte
  15. Unterschiede in der Entstehung und Sicherung von Wettbewerbsvorteilen bei KMU und großen Unternehmen
  16. Die Unvereinbarkeit des österreichischen Glücksspielgesetzes mit dem Europäischen Gemeinschaftsrecht
  17. Supporting Visual and Verbal Learning Preferences in a Second-Language Multimedia Learning Environment
  18. Rapping against Old and New Nazis: Bejarano and Microphone Mafia’s Multidirectional Musical Memory Work
  19. Merkmalsextraktion und semantische Integration von Ultrabreitband-Sensoren zur Erkennung von Notfällen
  20. From Planning to Implementation: Top-Down and Bottom-Up Approaches for Collaborative Watershed Management
  21. The religious constant - The interpretation of hypotheses of the natural sciences in educational theory
  22. Konsequenzen der bankaufsichtlichen Neuregelungen bei operationellen Risiken für Genossenschaftsbanken
  23. A scale-up procedure to dialkyl carbonates; evaluation of their properties, biodegradability, and toxicity
  24. Die geschlossene Unterbringung von Kindern und Jugendlichen in stationären Einrichtungen der Jugendhilfe