Energy in Germany is obtained for the vast majority from fossil sources, accounting for 77.6% of total energy consumption in 2023, followed by renewables at 19.6%, and 0.7% nuclear power.[1][2] As of 2023, German primary energy consumption amounted to 10,791 Petajoule, making it the ninth largest global primary energy consumer. The total consumption has been steadily declining from its peak of 14,845 Petajoule in 2006.[3][2] In 2023 Germany's gross electricity production reached 508.1 TWh,[1] down from 569.2 TWh in 2022, and 631.4 TWh in 2013.[4]

Wind turbines and solar panels at Lisberg Castle in Germany
Energy mix of Germany

Key to Germany's energy policies and politics is the "Energiewende", meaning "energy turnaround" or "energy transformation". The policy includes nuclear phaseout (completed in 2023) and progressive replacement of fossil fuels by renewables. The nuclear electricity production lost in Germany's phase-out was primarily replaced with coal electricity production and electricity importing. One study found that the nuclear phase-out caused $12 billion in social costs per year, primarily due to increases in mortality due to exposure to pollution from fossil fuels.[5] Germany has been called "the world's first major renewable energy economy".[6][7] German governments support the European Green Deal.[8] Germany made a commitment to phasing out coal power by 2030.[9]

Prior to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Germany was highly dependent on Russian energy, accounting for half of its natural gas, a third of heating oil, and half of its coal imports from Russia.[10][11] Due to this reliance, Germany blocked, delayed or watered down EU proposals to cut Russian energy imports amid the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[12][13][14] However, the Russian invasion resulted in a radical shift in Germany's energy policy, with the goal of being almost completely independent of Russian energy imports by mid-2024.[15]

Energy statistics

Electricity in 2020[16]
(TWh)
Category Amount
Consumption 500.35
Production 545.20
Import 48.05
Export 66.93
Natural gas in 2020[16]
(billion m3)
Consumption 87.55
Production 5.13
Import 83.12
Crude Oil in 2020[16]
(barrels)
Consumption 856,470,000
Production 49,280,000
Import 628,020,000

CO2 emissions in 2020: 603.35 million tons

Energy plan

The plan for 2030 aims for 80% of electricity from renewables.[17]

Energy consumption

 
Fossil fuel consumption in Germany, including combined former East and West from 1980 to 2011 from EIA data. Use of coal declined significantly after reunification.

In 2019, Germany was the sixth largest consumer of energy in the world.[18] The country also had the largest national market of electricity in Europe. Germany is the fifth-largest consumer of oil in the world, with oil accounting for 34.3% of all energy use in 2018, with another 23.7% coming from natural gas.[19]

Energy imports

In 2021, Germany imported 63.7% of its energy.[20]

About 98% of oil consumed in Germany is imported.[20] In 2021, Russia supplied 34.1% of crude oil imports, the US 12.5%, Kazakhstan 9.8% and Norway 9.6%.[20]

In 2021, Germany was the world's largest importer of natural gas, which covered more than a quarter of primary energy consumption in Germany.[20] Around 95% of Germany's natural gas was imported, of which around half is re-exported.[20] 55% of gas imports came from Russia, 30% from Norway and 13% from the Netherlands.[20] As of 2022, Germany does not have LNG terminals, so all gas imports use pipelines.[20] After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Germany announced that it wanted to build an LNG terminal at the North Sea port of Brunsbüttel to improve energy security.[21]

Due to its rich coal deposits, Germany has a long tradition of using coal. It was the fourth-largest consumer of coal in the world as of 2016.[22] Domestic hard coal mining has been completely phased out in 2018, as it could not compete with cheaper sources elsewhere and had survived only through subsidies. As of 2022, only lignite is still mined in Germany. After ending domestic production in 2018, Germany imported all 31.8 million tonnes of the hard coal it consumed in 2020. The biggest suppliers were Russia (45.4%), the United States (18.3%) and Australia (12.3%).[20]

In 2023, Germany's natural gas imports declined by 32.6%, to 968 terawatt hours (TWh).[23] This was attributed to greater energy saving and a decrease in gas exports.[23] The top sources for the import natural gas were Norway (43%), the Netherlands (26%), and Belgium (22%).[23]

Electricity production

 
Germany electricity production by source
 
Germany renewable electricity production by source
German electricity by source in 2023

<imagemap> File:Circle frame.svg|210px poly 100 100 200 100 199 99 199 97 199 95 199 93 199 91 199 89 199 87 198 85 198 83 198 81 197 79 197 77 196 75 196 73 195 71 194 69 194 67 193 65 192 63 192 62 191 60 190 58 189 56 188 54 187 53 186 51 185 49 184 47 183 46 182 44 181 42 180 41 178 39 177 38 176 36 175 35 173 33 172 32 171 30 169 29 168 27 166 26 165 25 163 23 162 22 160 21 158 20 157 19 155 17 154 16 152 15 150 14 148 13 147 12 145 11 144 11 100 100 Brown coal poly 100 100 144 11 142 10 140 9 138 8 136 7 134 7 132 6 131 5 129 5 127 4 125 4 123 3 121 3 119 2 117 2 115 2 113 1 111 1 109 1 107 1 105 1 103 1 101 1 99 1 97 1 95 1 93 1 100 100 Hard coal poly 100 100 93 1 91 1 89 1 87 1 85 2 83 2 81 2 79 3 77 3 75 3 74 4 72 4 70 5 68 6 66 6 64 7 62 8 60 8 58 9 57 10 55 11 53 12 51 13 50 14 48 15 46 16 44 17 43 18 41 19 40 20 38 22 36 23 35 24 33 25 100 100 Natural gas poly 100 100 33 25 32 27 31 28 29 30 28 31 26 32 25 34 24 35 22 37 21 38 20 40 19 42 18 43 16 45 15 47 14 48 13 50 12 52 11 53 10 55 9 57 9 59 8 61 7 63 6 64 6 66 5 68 4 70 4 72 3 74 3 76 2 78 2 80 1 82 1 84 1 86 0 88 0 90 0 92 0 94 0 96 0 98 0 100 0 102 0 104 0 106 0 108 0 110 0 112 0 114 1 115 1 117 1 119 2 121 2 123 3 125 3 127 4 129 4 131 5 133 6 135 6 137 7 139 8 140 9 142 9 144 10 146 11 148 12 149 13 151 14 153 15 155 16 156 18 158 19 159 20 161 21 163 22 164 24 166 25 167 26 169 28 170 29 172 31 173 32 174 34 176 35 177 37 178 38 179 40 181 41 182 43 183 45 184 46 185 48 186 50 187 52 188 53 189 55 190 57 191 59 192 60 192 100 100 Wind poly 100 100 60 192 62 193 63 194 65 194 67 195 69 196 71 196 73 197 75 197 77 198 79 198 81 199 83 199 85 199 87 200 89 200 91 200 93 200 95 200 97 200 99 200 101 200 103 200 105 200 107 200 109 200 111 200 113 200 114 199 116 199 118 199 120 198 122 198 124 197 126 197 128 196 130 196 132 195 134 194 135 194 100 100 Solar poly 100 100 135 194 137 193 138 193 140 192 142 191 144 190 146 189 147 188 149 187 151 186 153 185 154 184 156 183 158 182 159 181 161 180 162 178 164 177 165 176 167 174 168 173 170 172 171 170 173 169 174 167 175 166 177 164 178 163 179 161 180 160 181 158 182 157 100 100 Biomass poly 100 100 182 157 183 156 184 154 185 152 186 150 187 149 100 100 Nuclear poly 100 100 187 149 188 147 189 145 190 144 191 142 191 140 192 138 193 136 194 134 194 133 195 131 195 129 196 127 196 125 197 123 197 123 100 100 Hydro poly 100 100 197 123 197 121 198 119 198 119 100 100 Oil poly 100 100 198 119 198 117 199 115 199 113 199 111 199 109 199 107 199 105 199 103 199 101 200 101 100 100 Other desc none </imagemap>

  •   Brown coal: 77.5 TW⋅h (17.7%)
  •   Hard coal: 36.05 TW⋅h (8.3%)
  •   Natural gas: 45.79 TW⋅h (10.5%)
  •   Wind: 139.77 TW⋅h (32.0%)
  •   Solar: 53.48 TW⋅h (12.2%)
  •   Biomass: 42.25 TW⋅h (9.7%)
  •   Nuclear: 6.72 TW⋅h (1.5%)
  •   Hydro: 19.48 TW⋅h (4.5%)
  •   Oil: 3.15 TW⋅h (0.7%)
  •   Other: 12.59 TW⋅h (2.9%)
Net generated electricity in 2023[24]

Sources of power

Fossil fuels

Coal power

 
Grafenrheinfeld Power Plant

Coal is the second-largest source of electricity in Germany. As of 2020, around 24% of the electricity in the country is generated from coal.[25] This was down from 2013, when coal made up about 45% of Germany's electricity production (19% from hard coal and 26% from lignite).[26] Nonetheless, in the first half of 2021, coal was the largest source of electricity in the country.[27]

Germany is also a major producer of coal. Lignite is extracted in the extreme western and eastern parts of the country, mainly in Nordrhein-Westfalen, Sachsen and Brandenburg. Considerable amounts are burned in coal plants near the mining areas to produce electricity and transporting lignite over far distances is not economically feasible; therefore, the plants are located near the extraction sites.[28] Bituminous coal is mined in Nordrhein-Westfalen and Saarland. Most power plants burning bituminous coal operate on imported material, therefore, the plants are located not only near to the mining sites, but throughout the country.[28]

German coal-fired power plants are being designed and modified so they can be increasingly flexible to support the fluctuations resulting from increased renewable energy. Existing power plants in Germany are designed to operate flexibly. Load following is achieved by German natural gas combined cycle plants and coal-fired power plants. New coal-fired power plants have a minimum load capability of approximately 40%, with further potential to reduce this to 20–25%. The reason is that the output of the coal boiler is controlled via direct fuel combustion and not, as is the case with a gas combined-cycle power plant, via a heat recovery steam generator with an upstream gas turbine.[26]

Germany has been opening new coal power plants until recently[when?], following a 2007 plan to build 26 new coal plants.[29] This has been controversial in light of Germany's commitment to curbing carbon emissions.[30] By 2015, the growing share of renewable energy in the national electricity market (26% in 2014, up from 4% in 1990) and the government's mandated CO2 emission reduction targets (40% below 1990 levels by 2020; 80% below 1990 levels by 2050) have increasingly curtailed previous plans for new, expanded coal power capacity.[31][32]

On 26 January 2019, a group of federal and state leaders as well as industry representatives, environmentalists, and scientists made an agreement to close all 84 coal plants in the country by 2038. The move is projected to cost 40 billion in compensation alone to closed businesses. Coal was used to generate almost 40% of the country's electricity in 2018 and is expected to be replaced by renewable energy and natural gas.[33] 24 coal plants are planned to be closed by 2022 with all but 8 closed by 2030. The final date is expected to be assessed every 3 years.[34]

In 2019 the import of coal rose 1.4% compared with 2018.[35]

The phasing out of black coal (anthracite) was brought forward in 2023 by 8 years to 2030, there is no agreement yet on phasing out brown coal (lignite) [36] although the EU gave approval in late 2023 for a €2.6 billion compensation payment to RWE to phase out lignite in the Rhine region.[37]

Natural gas

National energy policy has shifted towards utilizing natural gas to replace coal and serve as a complementary fuel source as green energy projects are developed. The seaports of Lubmin, Brunsbuettel, Stade, and Wilhelmshaven utilize floating liquefied natural gas floating storage and regasification units to import gas.[38]

Renewable energy

 
Photovoltaic array and wind turbines at the Schneebergerhof wind farm in the German state of Rheinland-Pfalz
Years in which the last three renewable power levels achieved
Achievement Year Achievement Year Achievement Year
5% 2003 10% 2007 15% 2017[16]

Renewable energy includes wind, solar, biomass and geothermal energy sources.

The share of electricity produced from renewable energy in Germany has increased from 6.3 per cent of the national total in 2000 to 46.2 per cent in 2022.[39] Germany renewable power market grew from 0.8 million residential customers in 2006 to 4.9 million in 2012, or 12.5% of all private households in the country.

In end of 2011, the cumulative installed total of renewable power was 65.7GW.[40] Although Germany does not have a very sunny climate, solar photovoltaic power made up 4% of annual electricity consumption. On 25 May 2012, a Saturday, solar power reached a new record, injecting 22 GW of power into the German power grid. This met 50% of the nation's mid-day electricity demand on that day.[41]

In 2016, renewable energy based electricity generation reached 29.5%, but coal remained a factor at 40.1% of total generation. Wind was the leading renewable source at 12.3%, followed by biomass at 7.9% and solar PV at 5.9%.[42]

In 2020, renewable energy reached a share of 50.9% on the German public grid. Wind power made up 27% of total generation, and solar made up 10.5%. Biomass made up 9.7%, and hydro power made up 3.8%. The largest single non-renewable source was brown coal, with 16.8% of generation, followed by nuclear with 12.5%, then hard coal at 7.3%. Gas mainly provides peaking services, allowing for a generation share of 11.6%.[43]

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Renewables as a percentage of gross electricity consumption[44]
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Renewables as a percentage of primary energy consumption[44]

Solar power

In 2022 Germany had 66.5 GW of solar power capacity, which generated 62 terawatt hours of power from 2.65 million individual installations.[45]

Wind power

 
Wind farms in North Rhine-Westphalia

In March 2023 there were around 28,500 turbines in operation in Germany with a combined capacity of 58.5 GW.[17]

Offshore wind in Germany is expected to reach 115 GW by 2030.[17]

Bioenergy

In October 2016 the German Biomass Research Center (Deutsches Biomasseforschungszentrum) (DBFZ) launched an online biomass atlas for researchers, investors and the interested public.[46][47]

Nuclear power

 
The Isar Nuclear Power Plant was taken out of service on 15 April 2023

Nuclear power has been a topical political issue in recent decades, with continuing debates about when the technology should be phased out. A coalition government of Gerhard Schröder took the decision in 2002 to phase out all nuclear power by 2022.[48][49] The topic received renewed attention at the start of 2007 due to the political impact of the Russia-Belarus energy dispute and in 2011 after the Fukushima I nuclear accidents in Japan.[50] Within days of the March 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, large anti-nuclear protests occurred in Germany. Protests continued and, on 29 May 2011, Merkel's government announced that it would close all of its nuclear power plants by 2022.[51][52] Eight of the seventeen operating reactors in Germany were permanently shut down following Fukushima in 2011.

The last operational German reactors closed down in April 2023.[53][54]

Energy efficiency

 
German Energy Efficiency Targets

The energy efficiency bottom-up index for the whole economy (ODEX) in Germany decreased by 18% between 1991 and 2006, which is equivalent to an energy efficiency improvement by 1.2% per annum on average based on the ODEX, which calculates technical efficiency improvements. Since the beginning of the new century, however, the efficiency improvement measured by the ODEX has slowed down. While a continuous decrease by 1.5%/y could be observed between 1991 and 2001, the decrease in the period from 2001 to 2006 only amounted to 0.5%, which is below the EU-27 level.[55]

By 2030 the German Federal Ministry of the Economy projects an increase in electricity consumption to 658 TWh. The expected increase is due to an expected uptick in electric mobility, more heating through electric heat-pumps, and production of batteries and hydrogen.[56]

Government energy policy

Germany was the fourth-largest producer of nuclear power in the world, but in 2000, the government and the German nuclear power industry agreed to phase out all nuclear power plants by 2021,[57] as a result of an initiative with a vote result of 513 Yes, 79 No and 8 Empty. The seven oldest reactors were permanently closed after the Fukushima accident.[58] However, being an integral part of the EU's internal electricity market, Germany will continue to consume foreign nuclear electricity even after 2022.[59] In September 2010, Merkel's government reached a late-night deal which would see the country's 17 nuclear plants run, on average, 12 years longer than planned, with some remaining in production until well into the 2030s.[60] Then, following Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, the government changed its mind again, deciding to proceed with the plan to close all nuclear plants in the country by 2022.[61]

After becoming Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel expressed concern for overreliance on Russian energy, but the policy of energy imports did not change significantly afterwards.[62]

Government policy emphasises conservation and the development of renewable sources, such as solar, wind, biomass, water, and geothermal power. As a result of energy saving measures, energy efficiency (the amount of energy required to produce a unit of gross domestic product) has been improving since the beginning of the 1970s.

Speaking at the COP28 climate summit in Dubai in December 2023, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz called for a phase-out of fossil fuels, including coal, oil and natural gas, and reiterated Germany's commitment to be climate neutral by 2045, saying, "The technologies are there: wind power, photovoltaics, electric motors, green hydrogen."[63]

Sustainable energy

In September 2010, the German government announced a new aggressive energy policy with the following targets:[64]

  • Reducing CO2 emissions 40% below 1990 levels by 2020 and 80% below 1990 levels by 2050
  • Increasing the relative share of renewable energy in gross energy consumption to 18% by 2020, 30% by 2030 and 60% by 2050
  • Increasing the relative share of renewable energy in gross electrical consumption to 35% by 2020 and 80% by 2050
  • Increasing the national energy efficiency by cutting electrical consumption 50% below 2008 levels by 2050

Forbes ranked German Aloys Wobben ($3B), founder of Enercon, as the richest person in the energy business (wind power) in Germany in 2013.[65]

Taxes

Fossil fuel taxes

2019 fossil fuel taxes[66]
Gas oil (>50 mg/kg sulfur) Gas oil(≤50 mg/kg sulfur) Heavy oil Other oils Natural Gas Liquefied petroleum gas
unit €/liter €/liter €/kg €/liter €/MWh €/tonne
Taxation 0.7635 0.6135 0.25 0.6135 5.50 60.60

Carbon tax

The German ecological tax reform was adopted in 1999. After that, the law was amended in 2000 and in 2003. The law grew taxes on fuel and fossil fuels and laid the foundation for the tax for energy. In December 2019, the German Government agreed on a carbon tax of 25 Euros per tonne of CO2 on oil and gas companies. The law came into effect in January 2021. The tax will increase to 55 Euros per tonne by 2025.[67] From 2026 onwards, the price will be decided at auction.[68]


 
Development of carbon dioxide emissions

See also

References

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External links

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