Climate protection and a new operator: The Eastern German lignite industry is changing

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearch

Standard

Climate protection and a new operator: The Eastern German lignite industry is changing. / Oei, Pao-Yu; Brauers, Hanna; Kemfert, Claudia et al.
In: DIW Economic Bulletin, Vol. 7, No. 6/7, 10.02.2017, p. 63-73.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearch

Harvard

Oei, P-Y, Brauers, H, Kemfert, C, Hirschhausen, CV, Schäfer, D & Schmalz, S 2017, 'Climate protection and a new operator: The Eastern German lignite industry is changing', DIW Economic Bulletin, vol. 7, no. 6/7, pp. 63-73. <http://hdl.handle.net/10419/155375>

APA

Vancouver

Oei PY, Brauers H, Kemfert C, Hirschhausen CV, Schäfer D, Schmalz S. Climate protection and a new operator: The Eastern German lignite industry is changing. DIW Economic Bulletin. 2017 Feb 10;7(6/7):63-73.

Bibtex

@article{4654f8f918f2458e8fd6a8885fad055f,
title = "Climate protection and a new operator: The Eastern German lignite industry is changing",
abstract = "According to the German federal government's climate protection targets, there will be a continuous reduction of lignite-based electricity well before 2030. Simulations show that the currently authorized lignite mines in eastern Germany would not be fully depleted if the climate protection targets for 2030 were complied with. This makes planning for new mines or the expansion of existing ones superfluous. For the planning security of all the actors involved, policy makers should bindingly exclude permits for additional surface mines. In terms of the follow-up costs of lignite mining, the issue is whether or not the companies' provisions are high enough and insolvency-proof. In this context, the new ownership structures in the eastern German lignite industry, after Vattenfall's sale of its lignite division to Czech Energeticky a Prumyslovy Holding (EPH), have become a matter of importance. Simulations show that only under optimistic assumptions, the current provisions of 1.5 billion euros for the Lusatian lignite region are sufficient to cover recultivation costs. However, alternative scenarios show significant shortfalls. For this reason, policy makers should work toward independent, transparent cost estimates. Additional measures should be considered as required, such as the creation of a public sector fund to permanently protect the general public against being forced to take on the costs of recultivation. This is also animportant theme for the government's new Commission on Growth, Structural Change, and Regional Development (Kommission Wachstum, Strukturwandel und Regionalentwicklung). Individual federal states also have key roles to play in the creation of a dependable roadmap for a coal phase-out. For example, the government of Brandenburg is now in the process of revising its energy strategy for 2030 (Energiestrategie 2030).",
keywords = "Economics, coal, climate policy, Germany, lignite, energy transition, liabilities",
author = "Pao-Yu Oei and Hanna Brauers and Claudia Kemfert and Hirschhausen, {Christian von} and Dorothea Sch{\"a}fer and Sophie Schmalz",
year = "2017",
month = feb,
day = "10",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "63--73",
journal = "DIW Economic Bulletin",
issn = "2192-7219",
publisher = "Deutsches Institut f{\"u}r Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW)",
number = "6/7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Climate protection and a new operator

T2 - The Eastern German lignite industry is changing

AU - Oei, Pao-Yu

AU - Brauers, Hanna

AU - Kemfert, Claudia

AU - Hirschhausen, Christian von

AU - Schäfer, Dorothea

AU - Schmalz, Sophie

PY - 2017/2/10

Y1 - 2017/2/10

N2 - According to the German federal government's climate protection targets, there will be a continuous reduction of lignite-based electricity well before 2030. Simulations show that the currently authorized lignite mines in eastern Germany would not be fully depleted if the climate protection targets for 2030 were complied with. This makes planning for new mines or the expansion of existing ones superfluous. For the planning security of all the actors involved, policy makers should bindingly exclude permits for additional surface mines. In terms of the follow-up costs of lignite mining, the issue is whether or not the companies' provisions are high enough and insolvency-proof. In this context, the new ownership structures in the eastern German lignite industry, after Vattenfall's sale of its lignite division to Czech Energeticky a Prumyslovy Holding (EPH), have become a matter of importance. Simulations show that only under optimistic assumptions, the current provisions of 1.5 billion euros for the Lusatian lignite region are sufficient to cover recultivation costs. However, alternative scenarios show significant shortfalls. For this reason, policy makers should work toward independent, transparent cost estimates. Additional measures should be considered as required, such as the creation of a public sector fund to permanently protect the general public against being forced to take on the costs of recultivation. This is also animportant theme for the government's new Commission on Growth, Structural Change, and Regional Development (Kommission Wachstum, Strukturwandel und Regionalentwicklung). Individual federal states also have key roles to play in the creation of a dependable roadmap for a coal phase-out. For example, the government of Brandenburg is now in the process of revising its energy strategy for 2030 (Energiestrategie 2030).

AB - According to the German federal government's climate protection targets, there will be a continuous reduction of lignite-based electricity well before 2030. Simulations show that the currently authorized lignite mines in eastern Germany would not be fully depleted if the climate protection targets for 2030 were complied with. This makes planning for new mines or the expansion of existing ones superfluous. For the planning security of all the actors involved, policy makers should bindingly exclude permits for additional surface mines. In terms of the follow-up costs of lignite mining, the issue is whether or not the companies' provisions are high enough and insolvency-proof. In this context, the new ownership structures in the eastern German lignite industry, after Vattenfall's sale of its lignite division to Czech Energeticky a Prumyslovy Holding (EPH), have become a matter of importance. Simulations show that only under optimistic assumptions, the current provisions of 1.5 billion euros for the Lusatian lignite region are sufficient to cover recultivation costs. However, alternative scenarios show significant shortfalls. For this reason, policy makers should work toward independent, transparent cost estimates. Additional measures should be considered as required, such as the creation of a public sector fund to permanently protect the general public against being forced to take on the costs of recultivation. This is also animportant theme for the government's new Commission on Growth, Structural Change, and Regional Development (Kommission Wachstum, Strukturwandel und Regionalentwicklung). Individual federal states also have key roles to play in the creation of a dependable roadmap for a coal phase-out. For example, the government of Brandenburg is now in the process of revising its energy strategy for 2030 (Energiestrategie 2030).

KW - Economics

KW - coal

KW - climate policy

KW - Germany

KW - lignite

KW - energy transition

KW - liabilities

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 7

SP - 63

EP - 73

JO - DIW Economic Bulletin

JF - DIW Economic Bulletin

SN - 2192-7219

IS - 6/7

ER -

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