Global war 2023 beim Klimawandel ein Jahr von viel Schatten aber auch Licht. Wir nähern uns rasant der 1,5 Grad-Schwelle mit ungebrochen hohen CO2-Emissionen und jetzt schon hohen Belastungen für Mensch und Natur. Zugleich haben Erneuer­bare beim Zubau von Erzeugungskapazität und Investitionsvolumen fossile und Atom­energie weltweit überflügelt.

Die Entwicklung in Deutschland spiegelt das. In einem Kraftakt hat die Ampel­re­gierung viele Weichen für mehr erneuerbare Energien in den Sektoren Strom, Wär­me und Verkehr gestellt. Die 2023 installierte Kapazität von Wind- und PV-Anlagen liegt etwa 50% über der von 2022. Aber im Verkehr ist noch kein relevanter Fort­schritt absehbar, das Gebäudeenergiegesetz wurde sehr aufge­weicht verabschiedet.

In 2023 wurde die Energy Watch Group in eine gemeinnützige Gesellschaft umge­wan­delt – der Energy Watch UG. Das stärkt die EWG, die nun finanziell und vertrag­lich eigenständig handeln kann. Präsident der EWG ist und bleibt Hans-Josef Fell.

Download EWG Jahresbericht 2023

Download EWG Jahresbericht 2021

Download EWG Jahresbericht 2020

Angesichts von Pandemie, Krieg und Klimakrise gewinnt ein Gefühl von Machtlosigkeit schnell die Oberhand. Wie gelingt es, inmitten dieser komplexen globalen Krisen nicht die Orientierung und den Optimismus zu verlieren, sondern als mutige Zukunftsgestaltende ins Handeln zu kommen für die sozial-ökologische Transformation?

In unserer neuen Webinar-Reihe „Mit Kompass aus den Krisen“ suchen wir gemeinsam nach Antworten.

Wie schaffen wir es, den Herausforderungen unserer Zeit emotional, gedanklich und ganz praktisch zu begegnen? In der ersten Episode geben Regisseurin Johanna Jaurich, Filmproduzent Carl-A. Fechner und Klimaschutzpionier Hans-Josef Fell einen grundlegenden Kompass in Krisenzeiten und zeigen, wie wir vom Zustand des Fühlens ins Wissen und Handeln kommen. Wie sieht die neue Welt aus? Und was ist jetzt konkret zu tun?

Nachschauen können Sie die Auftaktfolge hier auf unserem Youtube-Kanal.

In der zweiten Episode widmen wir uns mit der Umstellung auf 100% Erneuerbare Energien einem Handlungs- und Politikfeld, dem bei der Bewältigung der komplexen Krisen unserer Zeit eine besonders elementare Rolle zukommt: Fossile Energieträger sind für zwei Drittel der weltweiten Treibhausgasemissionen verantwortlich. Damit sind sie nicht nur Haupttreiber des Klimawandels, sondern auch ein enormes Risiko für die menschliche Gesundheit. Gleichzeitig verdeutlicht Putins Krieg in der Ukraine auf brutalste Weise, welche fatalen geopolitischen Folgen unsere fossile Abhängigkeit hat.

In diesem Webinar lichten Energieökonomin Prof. Dr. Claudia Kemfert und Klimaschutzpionier Hans-Josef Fell den energiepolitischen Gesetzesdschungel und geben einen Überblick: Ist den politischen Akteur*innen die Dringlichkeit des Ausbaus der Erneuerbaren inzwischen bewusst? Wo stehen wir aktuell wirklich auf dem Weg zu einer sauberen Energieversorgung? Zudem zeigen sie auf, wie jede*r Einzelne einen individuellen Beitrag zur Energiewende leisten und trotz der politischen Versäumnisse optimistisch bleiben kann, dass die sozial-ökologische Transformation gelingt.

Die zweite Folge finden Sie hier.

Über die nächsten Folgen informieren wir Sie rechtzeitig über Twitter, LinkedIn sowie unseren Newsletter.

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Dear Colleagues and Friends,

with summer arriving in the northern hemisphere, it is time for our quarterly update. Meanwhile, the world has become a different place. Russia’s war in Ukraine and the EU’s inability to decide on a complete boycott of Russian energy, thus depriving the Russian war machine of funding, shows us in the most brutal way what a disastrous geopolitical situation our fossil dependence has plunged us into. Climate and security policy have never been more closely linked.

At the same time, the latest IPCC report warns more urgently than ever that any further delay in concerted global action will miss a brief and rapidly closing window to secure a liveable future. It reveales that many impacts of the climate crisis will be more severe than predicted and that there is only a narrow chance left of avoiding its worst ravages. The IPCCs findings are that devastating that António Guterres, the UN secretary general, called the latest report “an atlas of human suffering and a damning indictment of failed climate leadership”.

As if that bleakest warning wasn´t enough, the World Meteorological Organization issued a climate update last month stating there is a 50% chance of reaching the 1.5 °C limit of the Paris Agreement no later than 2026 – and the likelihood is increasing with time. The chance of temporarily exceeding 1.5°C has risen steadily since 2015, when it was close to zero.  For the years between 2017 and 2021, there was a 10% chance of exceedance. That probability has increased to nearly 50% for the 2022-2026 period.And still global leaders are falling short on cutting climate-warming emissions. There still is a yawning gap between international climate pledges and commitments and collective climate action. On the one hand, climate and energy policy are more present in public discourse than ever before and numerous legislative packages have recently been put together at both the federal and EU level to accelerate the socio-ecological transformation. On the other hand, today’s activities and current policies have the world on track to warm by about 3 °C long before the end of the century. Which means, our focus now must be on accountability. We´re in the delivery phase and we definitely have no more time to lose.

A current example of this political cognitive dissonance is the fuel discount introduced by the German government two weeks ago. While the G7 countries have agreed to end fossil fuel subsidies, the German government is implementing a fossil fuel subsidy in the form of a fuel tax cut, which was supposed to relieve the financial burden on car drivers due to rising energy prices but completely failed in achieving this goal and merely increases the profits of the mineral oil companies instead.

What is becoming clear to us in the face of these mutually fueling global crises is that our work for the energy transition and a zero-emissions world is more important than ever. Only with 100% renewable energies, we will succeed in solving these complex crises of our time in a concerted manner, instead of playing them off against each other.

In this Newsletter you find an overview of what the EWG has accomplished in this second quarter of 2022.  Additionally, we present two recent academic publications on uranium and hydropower, that are closely linked to the results of previous EWG studies.

Particularly, this edition covers:

  • New publications on wind power, bioenergy, Swiss energy policy and biofuel
  • EWG presence at important Energy & Climate Conferences
  • Team Update
  • Uranium scarcity
  • Cost competitiveness of Power-to-Gas-systems

…and much more.

With that, we let you get right to it and wish you a wonderful summer!

Enjoy the reading!

Your EWG Team

Read full Newsletter here .

Annual Report | Recent Studies | Doomsday Glacier | The Concept of „Net Zero“

Read the full newsletter here.

Preview:

Dear Colleagues and Friends,

as the first month of the new year has already come to a close, we would like to take the opportunity and wish you all a belated happy, successful and healthy new year.

We know that it’s been a while since you received our last newsletter, but we have not stood still in the meantime and with a new year 2022 we would like to share with you an update on our last months of work for the energy transition.

With two new studies published and two new members for our EWG team in Berlin,  the last quarter of the year 2021 has been very succcessful and exciting for us. Speaking of our achievements of the last year, we are very pleased to announce that our Annual Report 2021 is now available here.

Looking outside the walls of our office, it seems like the imminent threat of climate change is becoming increasingly prominent in the global community. Last year’s COP in Glasgow and accompanying climate protests by Fridays For Future definitely helped to bring the crisis into sharp focus and climate has been on the agenda of many media outlets more than before.

The  much-noted movie “Don’t Look Up” with Leonardo DiCaprio and Meryl Streep further showcases the trend of increasing attention to Climate Change in the broader society. Finally, the World Economic Forum manifests this feeling with the publication of their latest annual survey on perceived global risks. The Climate Crisis and its consequences account for five out of the top ten most urgent risks faced by society – releasing Covid-19 from first place this year.

Sadly, even though the Climate Crisis seems to be on everyone’s mind, governments and big corporations still don’t let their actions match their rhetoric. Greenwashing equally seems to be more present than ever.  The latest example is the EU Taxonomy that is very likely to label fossil gas and nuclear energy as ‘sustainable’, making way for increased private investment in both technologies and thereby obstructing an effective energy transition.

Nevertheless, we optimistically look forward to this new year 2022, in which we expect climate protection and the energy transition to continue to gather further momentum. For our part, we have already planned numerous exciting projects, which we will of course keep you informed about.

This months edition covers:

  • Two new EWG studies on renewable energies 
  • EWG Team additions
  • Experts raise alarms about cracking Antarctic ice shelf 
  • Potential and constraints of „net zero“ as a frame of reference for climate action

With that, we let you get right to it and wish you a wonderful week!

Enjoy the reading!

Your EWG Team

Read the full newsletter here.

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Dear Colleagues and Friends,
It’s been a while since you heard from us, but now we’re back: We probably don’t need to remind you of the destructing extreme weather events that have occurred all over the world in these last months. The pictures of deadly fires and devatstating floods are still in all of our heads. Sadly, we cannot offer much consolation for those hoping that this summer was an exception. If humanity lets Climate Change proceed, we will face more and more summer months with devastating heat waves and/or heavy rainfall.

The IPCC has recently confirmed this once again. In the first chapter of their latest assessment report, it was made clear that human actions have “unequivocally caused” this situation of global heating and if we don’t act soon, the consequences will become much dearer. The third chapter, which lays out ways of reducing human influence on the climate, is set to be released early next year. However, Scientist Rebellion, the academic branch of Extinction Rebellion, leaked a draft version of this chapter before it can be watered down in negotiations with government representatives, as was common practice with previous IPCC reports. To no one’s surprise, the leak suggests radical changes in economic patterns, particularly for higher income consumers.

With climate change, time is of the essence, now more than ever. The next few years may be the last ones, to still induce the drastic change in emissions that is needed to remain within 1.5°C of planetary heating. When the next election is ahead in your country, remember to vote for a party with a solid plan to solve the Climate Crisis. In Germany, Canada and Norway elections are taking place this year still. Let’s make them count!

Our summer newsletter is dedicated to updating you on our activities in the last two months and sharing new climate science with you.

Particularly, this edition covers:

With that, we let you get right to it and wish you a good start into fall season.

Enjoy the reading!

Your EWG Team

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Dear Colleagues and Friends,

The month of June is over and summer has arrived in the northern hemisphere. Above all else this means that various places in the world face renewed heat waves, demonstrating yet again that climate change is well under way and its consequences are devastating. Unprecedented temperature highs in the Pacific North-West of Canada and the USA have people struggling with droughts and heat-related deaths. More wildfires than ever are to be expected in these and many other regions.

At the same time, it still does not seem like state leaders or the international community have grasped the urgency of the situation: Global GHG emissions have reached, and in some places, such as China, surpassed the pre-pandemic level, 600 new coal plants are planned by 5 Asian countries alone, and the energy transition is not progressing at the necessary speed.

Nor did the G7, who met mid-June to discuss pressing international issues like COVID-19 and Climate Change, make any substantial progress in their plans to fight the climate crisis. In fact, they failed yet again to deliver any concrete strategies to limit global warming to 1.5°C. They were not even able to uphold previous commitments to climate finance for the Global South. All in all, it was another rather empty Summit.

Our Newsletter this month addresses to a large part our own achievements and news about our activities. Additionally, we present three recent academic articles on varying topics related to the global energy transition.

This month’s edition covers:  

With that, we let you get right to it and wish you a happy & healthy month of July.

Enjoy the reading!

Your EWG Team

Pressemitteilung zum Download

28.05.2021 – Berlin | Innerhalb von nur zehn Jahren kann Deutschland flächendeckend auf eine Energieversorgung umgestellt werden, die vollständig auf Erneuerbaren Energien beruht. Die aktuelle Studie der Energy Watch Group (EWG) zeigt, dass Deutschland bereits bis 2030 vollständig, zuverlässig und wirtschaftlich mit Energie versorgt werden kann und dabei sogar über ein ökonomisch vorteilhafteres Energiesystem verfügt.

Die Studie stellt das erste umfassende Energie-Szenario vor, das Deutschlands Weg zu 100 % Erneuerbaren Energien bis 2030 sektorenübergreifend, technologisch und ökonomisch umsetzbar und mit vollständiger Bedarfsdeckung auch in winterlichen Dunkelflauten stundengenau gewährleistet. Damit wäre Deutschland im Innovationswettbewerb um die Klimaneutralität als erstes Industrieland weltweit führend, noch vor den USA und China.

„Wir können uns angesichts des Klimanotstandes nicht aussuchen, ob wir handeln wollen oder nicht“, sagt Thure Traber, Leitautor der Studie. „Es sind insbesondere regulatorische, politische und infrastrukturelle Hindernisse, die den zügigen Aufbau eines emissionsfreien Energiesystems in Deutschland verhindern. Eine schnelle strukturpolitische Beseitigung dieser Hemmnisse würde den sofortigen Beginn der energetischen Umstrukturierung ermöglichen.“

Nord-Süd- Szenarien

Die Studie untersucht die Nutzung aller Formen Erneuerbarer Energien. Für Deutschland bieten Windkraft und Photovoltaik (PV) die quantitativ wichtigsten Potentiale der Erneuerbaren. Nach aktuellem Stand ist der Ausbau der Windkraft im Süden Deutschlands, strukturell bedingt, fast vollständig zum Erliegen gekommen. Daher muss Strom aus Windkraft von der Nordsee und aus dem Norden Deutschlands mittels teurer und energetisch intensiver langer Überlandleitungen nach Süddeutschland transportiert werden.

Als Lösung weist die EWG-Studie quantifiziert nach: Die Investitionen in den Jahren bis 2030 in PV, Windkraft, Bioenergien, Geothermie und Wasserkraft sowie in Speicher, Wärmepumpen im Wärmesektor und Elektrische Antriebe im Verkehr, sowie vieler weiterer Technologien müssen und können massiv ausgebaut werden. Wesentlich ist ein dezentraler Ausbau aller Technologien, insbesondere auch der Windkraft in den südlichen Bundesländern. Damit kann ein weiterer sehr teurer, langwieriger Ausbau von hohen Leitungskapazitäten von Nord nach Süd vermieden werden.

Die heutigen jährlichen Ausbauraten müssen dafür zum Teil um das bis zu 20-fache erhöht werden. Das erscheint als immens, ist aber durchaus machbar. Hans-Josef Fell, Präsident der EWG, weist auf den Man-to-the-Moon-Charakter der unausweichlich notwendigen Transformation hin: „Solche exponentiellen Wachstumsgeschwindigkeiten ähneln denen, wie sie in bisherigen Technik- Revolutionen der Weltgeschichte oftmals in nur einer Dekade realisiert wurden: Mondlandung, PC, Internet und Mobilfunk.“

Investitionen und Innovationen

Mit rund einem Prozent der Weltbevölkerung stellt Deutschland die global viertstärkste Wirtschaftsnation dar. Es sind Investitionen und der direkte Wissenstransfer aus der Forschung in Gesellschaft und Wirtschaft, auf denen unser Wohlstand beruht. Durch die politische Vernachlässigung der Erneuerbaren Energie im letzten Jahrzehnt verschwanden nach der im vorletzten Jahrzehnt errungenen globalen Technologieführerschaft in der Windkraft rund 40.000 Arbeitsplätze, die Photovoltaikproduktion zog nach China um und baute in Deutschland 100.000 Stellen ab. Die aktuelle Eröffnung der europaweit größten Produktionsstätte für Solartechnologie in Bitterfeld zeigt aber, dass auch die Unternehmen die Unausweichlichkeit und das wirtschaftliche Potential eines neuen Energiesystems verstanden haben.

Deutschland als Industrienation hat mit einem gestalteten Zusammenspiel von Machbarkeit, technologischer Weiterentwicklung, verbesserter Effizienz und wachsender Bereitschaft in Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft das Potential, zum führenden Industrieland mit UN-SDG-Standards zu werden, das ist die Aussage der EWG-Studie.

Download der Zusammenfassung und der Studie:

Energy Watch Group (2021): „100% Erneuerbare Energien für Deutschland bis 2030. Klimaschutz – Versorgungssicherheit – Wirtschaftlichkeit”

Zusammenfassung Deutsch | Zusammenfassung Englisch | Vollständige Studie Deutsch

 

Pressekontakt:
Felix De Caluwe
press@energywatchgroup.org

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Dear Colleagues and Friends,

In the last week of May we published our latest study about a potential path for Germany to reach 100% renewable energies until 2030. Our calculations show that it is both feasible and economically advantageous for Germany to be powered entirely by renewables. The study is featured in our very first article this month, so you cannot miss it!

In other news, the month of May witnessed a crucial leap forward from the side of the International Energy Agency (IEA), usually not known for their progressive stance on renewable energies. In a report called “NetZero by 2050” the IEA outlines the, in their view, most important steps to a Net Zero world, for the first time acknowledging the feasibility necessity of bringing emissions to (close to) zero. While their stance is still by far not ambitious enough, this report is a big step in the right direction.

Moreover, this month was a devastating one for Big Oil. Exxon is coming under increasing pressure from climate activist shareholders, now holding two seats of the companies’ executive board. Additionally, the groundbreaking ruling over Shell’s responsibility to adhere to the Paris Agreement is still and will continue to create a stir in the landscape of oil companies (more details in our article on climate activism).

Moreover, this month’s edition covers:

With that, we let you get right to it and wish you a happy & healthy June.

Enjoy the reading!


Your EWG Team

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Dear Colleagues and Friends,

The month of April is already over and next to the latest news on vaccinations and COVID-19 rules, which most of the world is still grappling with, we picked up on a few stories about energy and climate, that we want to share with you.

First of all, in a historic decision, the German federal constitutional court declared the country’s current climate law insufficient to effectively protect future generations from climate change. As a consequence, the government now must adapt its current targets, providing for clear measures from 2030 onwards. The court therewith indirectly affirms that Germany’s carbon budget will be essentially diminished by 2030, indirectly stating that any emissions after this date will jeopardise the 1.5°C target. To what extent the government will adapt its climate policies, remains to be seen, but one thing is clear: This ruling provides enormous momentum for the national climate movement and its impact will spread far beyond Germany’s borders.

In other news, on April 22nd, we celebrated Earth Day. Under the motto #RestoreEarth, we collectively remembered that it is our duty to protect the environment and the climate on our home, planet Earth. In the spirit of Earth Day, US president Biden held a virtual Climate Summit, hosting many of our world’s leaders, where he announced to cut CO2 emissions in the US by 50% until 2030. The summit and its (lack of) outcomes has caused frustration among climate activists from Fridays For Future and alike, who have long been demanding more ambitious goals in order to actually achieve what was agreed on in Paris, in 2015.

Moreover, this month’s edition covers:

With that, we let you get right to it and wish you a happy & healthy month of May.

Enjoy the reading!


Your EWG Team

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Dear Colleagues and Friends,

With the end of March, the year 2021 is entering springtime, at least in Europe. We hope that more daylight and more sunshine will lift you up in these tough times and finally bring this pandemic to an end. We are hopeful that better times lie ahead of us!

Sadly, the same thing cannot be said about climate change. States are still not setting targets ambitious enough to limit global warming to 1.5C° threatening the threshold of dangerous climate tipping points. Let us fill you in on how the Energy Watch Group has been working this month to accelerate political action towards renewable energy and climate protection:

This month has been marked by the 10-year anniversary of the tragic nuclear accident in Fukushima. We have dedicated two articles of our newsletter to the discussion around nuclear energy, focusing on why it cannot be considered a climate solution and what we should do instead. For those of you who are interested in Japan’s future energy supply, check out the article on how the island state can become climate neutral by 2050.

Besides that, we’re covering the following topics:

Lastly, we celebrated International Women’s Day on March 8th! It is important to keep in mind that also the climate and energy sector suffers from a severe underrepresentation of women. Let’s work together to change that. Shout-out to all of you out there, fighting for gender equality and climate action!

Enjoy the reading!

Your EWG Team