Germany lays out plan to exit coal-fired power plants

Getty Images Steam rises from cooling towers at the Jaenschswalde lignite coal-fired power plant on January 15, 2020 near Peitz, Germany. BERLIN (AP) — German officials have agreed on a plan to shut down the nation’s coal-fired power plants by the mid to late 2030s, the government said Thursday. A year ago, a government-appointed panel recommended that Germany stop burning coal to generate electricity by 2038 at the latest, as part of efforts to curb climate change. However, efforts to translate that into policy had stalled over recent months. Some areas, particularly in the less prosperous east, are heavily dependent on lignite coal mining. Federal government officials and governors of affected states agreed on a “path to shut down” coal-powered plants at a meeting that ended in the early hours of Thursday, the government said in a statement. It said that reviews will be carried out in 2026 and 2029 to determine whether Germany can exit coal-fired electricity generation in 2035, three years before the final deadline. Many other details weren’t immediately available. Germany gets more than a third of its electricity from burning coal, generating large amounts of greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming. The federal government […]

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