Germany's climate activists on edge as parties shape coalition agenda
Conservatives on track to lead country after election win as they back some fossil-fuel friendly policies
Published: 05:03 PM,Mar 07,2025 | EDITED : 09:03 PM,Mar 07,2025
Climate activists fear the worst when Germany's conservatives and Social Democrats begin to thrash out a joint climate policy for their future coalition government.
A country once seen as a beacon of progressive climate policy is poised for a significant reset, with the conservatives — having in part blamed Germany's ambitious green goals for chronic economic weakness — keen to roll back targets and policies amid rising voter apathy on climate.
As Europe's largest emitter of CO2 but also Europe's biggest generator of renewable energy, Germany's future stance on climate issues will be even more critical after the United States' withdrawal from the Paris Agreement and with the European Union under pressure from some members to ease regulations and goals.
'If there was ever a time to panic about climate and politics, now would be it,' said Luisa Neubauer, a prominent German climate activist with Fridays for Future. Since winning February's election, the CDU has affirmed its commitment to Germany's overarching 2045 target of being climate neutral but emphasises a 'pragmatic approach that supports the economy, industry and public acceptance', according to Andreas Jung, the conservatives' climate policy spokesperson.
The party wants to abolish a future ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars, end restrictions on the use of cars, reverse a law phasing out fossil fuel heating and reintroduce diesel subsidies in agriculture.
How strongly the SPD will defend its green election pledges — to stick to national and EU targets, invest in green infrastructure and renewables and focus on affordable climate protection — in coalition talks is key, climate activists say.
Nina Scheer, an SPD climate spokeswoman, said it would be important to develop a common understanding with the conservatives on an accelerated and systematic transition to renewable energies. But that could be tricky.
The SPD has been significantly weakened and came in third place in the election, with just 16.4 per cent of the vote, its worst ever result.
'The SPD is not a traditional climate policy party like the Greens, so we shouldn’t expect them to push this issue as strongly,' said Stefan Marschall, political scientist at the University of Duesseldorf.
Greenhouse gas emissions in Germany fell by 12.5 per cent under the three-party 'traffic light' coalition of the SPD, Greens and Free Democrats, thanks to a renewable energy push and a drop in industrial production. But emissions cuts in sectors such as transport and building — 38 per cent of Germany's 2024 total emissions — have stalled.
Expanding net-zero policies to these sectors has faced growing resistance in Germany and Europe, amid a cost-of-living crisis that has shifted climate protection lower on German voters' priorities in the February election.
Only 12.8 per cent of Germans saw climate protection as the most important issue in this election, down from 24.4 per cent in 2021, a study by IW Koeln economic institute showed.
Environmental and expert groups say Germany is not expected to meet the 2045 target as things stand. The Green Party, heading for opposition, still wields some influence, after threatening to tie its support for a new conservative-SPD financial package to the inclusion of some climate investment commitments within that plan.
Germany cannot unilaterally reverse EU laws, but its influence is strong. The centre-right European People's Party (EPP), the largest group at the European parliament and which includes Germany's conservatives, launched a campaign in December to weaken the bloc's climate rules.
At a recent EPP retreat in Berlin, conservative leader and Germany's likely next chancellor Friedrich Merz signed a declaration calling on the EU to abandon its renewable energy goals, a step backed by industry. — Reuters
The writer is politics, general news correspondent, Thomson Reuters
A country once seen as a beacon of progressive climate policy is poised for a significant reset, with the conservatives — having in part blamed Germany's ambitious green goals for chronic economic weakness — keen to roll back targets and policies amid rising voter apathy on climate.
As Europe's largest emitter of CO2 but also Europe's biggest generator of renewable energy, Germany's future stance on climate issues will be even more critical after the United States' withdrawal from the Paris Agreement and with the European Union under pressure from some members to ease regulations and goals.
'If there was ever a time to panic about climate and politics, now would be it,' said Luisa Neubauer, a prominent German climate activist with Fridays for Future. Since winning February's election, the CDU has affirmed its commitment to Germany's overarching 2045 target of being climate neutral but emphasises a 'pragmatic approach that supports the economy, industry and public acceptance', according to Andreas Jung, the conservatives' climate policy spokesperson.
The party wants to abolish a future ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars, end restrictions on the use of cars, reverse a law phasing out fossil fuel heating and reintroduce diesel subsidies in agriculture.
How strongly the SPD will defend its green election pledges — to stick to national and EU targets, invest in green infrastructure and renewables and focus on affordable climate protection — in coalition talks is key, climate activists say.
Nina Scheer, an SPD climate spokeswoman, said it would be important to develop a common understanding with the conservatives on an accelerated and systematic transition to renewable energies. But that could be tricky.
The SPD has been significantly weakened and came in third place in the election, with just 16.4 per cent of the vote, its worst ever result.
'The SPD is not a traditional climate policy party like the Greens, so we shouldn’t expect them to push this issue as strongly,' said Stefan Marschall, political scientist at the University of Duesseldorf.
Greenhouse gas emissions in Germany fell by 12.5 per cent under the three-party 'traffic light' coalition of the SPD, Greens and Free Democrats, thanks to a renewable energy push and a drop in industrial production. But emissions cuts in sectors such as transport and building — 38 per cent of Germany's 2024 total emissions — have stalled.
Expanding net-zero policies to these sectors has faced growing resistance in Germany and Europe, amid a cost-of-living crisis that has shifted climate protection lower on German voters' priorities in the February election.
Only 12.8 per cent of Germans saw climate protection as the most important issue in this election, down from 24.4 per cent in 2021, a study by IW Koeln economic institute showed.
Environmental and expert groups say Germany is not expected to meet the 2045 target as things stand. The Green Party, heading for opposition, still wields some influence, after threatening to tie its support for a new conservative-SPD financial package to the inclusion of some climate investment commitments within that plan.
Germany cannot unilaterally reverse EU laws, but its influence is strong. The centre-right European People's Party (EPP), the largest group at the European parliament and which includes Germany's conservatives, launched a campaign in December to weaken the bloc's climate rules.
At a recent EPP retreat in Berlin, conservative leader and Germany's likely next chancellor Friedrich Merz signed a declaration calling on the EU to abandon its renewable energy goals, a step backed by industry. — Reuters
The writer is politics, general news correspondent, Thomson Reuters