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Energy Association: Major time pressure for new gas-fired power plants

Kerstin Andreae, Chairwoman of the BDEW Executive Board, is calling for swift decisions by a new German government with regard to the construction of new gas-fired power plants / Photo: Patrick Pleul/dpa
Kerstin Andreae, Chairwoman of the BDEW Executive Board, is calling for swift decisions by a new German government with regard to the construction of new gas-fired power plants / Photo: Patrick Pleul/dpa

Hydrogen-capable gas-fired power plants are a prerequisite for phasing out coal - but plans are stalling. An industry association is appealing to the future government to make quick decisions.

The German Association of Energy and Water Industries (BDEW) has called on the future German government to quickly clarify the construction of new hydrogen-capable gas-fired power plants. "We really do have time pressure here," said Kerstin Andreae, Chairwoman of the BDEW Executive Board, at a conference in Cottbus on infrastructure development in the Lusatian and Central German coalfields. "We really need (...) a tendering framework for these new gas-fired power plants very quickly now." The Federal Government must act very quickly here, said Andreae. This is also necessary in order to complete the agreed coal phase-out in Lusatia.

Funding still open

How the state will fund the construction of new gas-fired power plants is still unclear. The plans of Federal Economics Minister Robert Habeck (Greens) failed due to the premature break-up of the previous traffic light government. In future, gas-fired power plants are to be available as a backup when the sun is not shining and the wind is not blowing. The timing of the coal phase-out also depends on this. The gas-fired power plants are to be converted to more climate-friendly hydrogen at a later date.

The companies have an interest in investing in this new, more economical alternative, but they need an investment framework for this, said Andreae. The construction of new gas-fired power plants will also take several years. "There is an approximate time frame that you need six years between planning, approval and construction."

Coal phase-out planned in the 2030s

According to the German Coal Phase-out Act, no more electricity will be generated from coal in Lusatia from 2038 at the latest. The energy company Leag in Cottbus is planning a far-reaching conversion to renewable energies in the coal mining region. In the Rhenish mining area, the coal phase-out has been brought forward by eight years to 2030.

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