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Energiewende: Germany's Transition from Coal to Renewables MTA
Policy, technology, and social implications of the German energy transformation
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Energiewende: Germany's Transition from Coal to Renewables Germany's Energiewende is an ambitious, decades-long endeavor to transition a major industrial economy from fossil fuels and nuclear power to a system dominated by renewable energy, efficiency, and electrification. Initiated by environmental movements in the late 1970s and solidified by the 2000 Renewable Energy Act (EEG), this transformation is characterized by its democratic nature, continuous learning, and adaptation across various policy instruments. The phase-out of nuclear power, accelerated after the Fukushima disaster in 2011, alongside a planned coal exit by 2030, set a dual objective of decarbonization and risk reduction, necessitating an unprecedented build-out of renewable capacity and flexible grid infrastructure.

The policy framework for the Energiewende evolved from guaranteed feed-in tariffs, which rapidly scaled wind and solar by offering long-term price certainty and fostering citizen participation, to competitive auctions and market-based instruments like Contracts for Difference (CfDs). Carbon pricing, through the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) and a national scheme for heating and transport, increasingly drives investment away from fossil fuels. However, this complex interplay of instruments faces challenges such as controlling costs, integrating variable renewables into the grid, and navigating a multi-level governance structure involving EU directives, federal laws, state (Länder) land-use planning, and municipal implementation, often leading to permitting bottlenecks and coordination complexities.

A crucial aspect of the Energiewende is the extensive grid expansion required to transport wind power from the North to industrial centers in the South, alongside widespread distribution network upgrades to accommodate millions of distributed generators and new electric loads like heat pumps and electric vehicles. System integration hinges on flexibility resources such as battery storage, pumped hydro, and emerging long-duration options like hydrogen, all orchestrated by digitalization and smart grid technologies to balance supply and demand in real time. Decarbonizing the heat, transport, and industrial sectors—through power-to-heat solutions like heat pumps and district heating, EV adoption, and green hydrogen for steel and chemicals—represents a significant undertaking, requiring extensive investment, technological innovation, and significant social and economic restructuring.

Throughout this transformation, public acceptance and participation have been pivotal. Citizen energy cooperatives, local ownership models, and transparent engagement processes have fostered support, while contentious issues like wind turbine siting and transmission line construction highlight the need for equitable benefit sharing, clear communication, and sensitive land-use planning that balances energy goals with environmental and landscape values. The Energiewende's high costs, encompassing generation, grid, system integration, and social transition, are financed through a mix of market mechanisms, public funding, and private investment. Ultimately, Germany's experience offers transferable lessons on adaptive governance, the importance of robust infrastructure, and the necessity of inclusive processes for achieving a resilient, low-carbon, and socially equitable energy future.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Comprehensive policy analysis of Germany's Energiewende, tracing the evolution from feed-in tariffs to auctions, carbon pricing, and market-based mechanisms like Contracts for Difference.
  • Technical deep-dive into renewable integration challenges, covering grid expansion, storage solutions, and flexibility resources needed for high shares of variable wind and solar power.
  • Examination of social dimensions including public acceptance, citizen energy cooperatives, just transition principles for coal regions, and procedural fairness in energy project siting.
  • Detailed exploration of sector coupling strategies linking electricity with heating, transport, and industry through heat pumps, electric vehicles, green hydrogen, and Power-to-X technologies.
  • Actionable lessons for policymakers highlighting transferable insights, common pitfalls to avoid, and sector-specific roadmaps for decarbonization from 2030 to 2045.
Who's It For:

This book is essential reading for energy policymakers, grid planners, and renewable energy professionals seeking to understand Germany's comprehensive energy transition. It provides valuable insights for environmental analysts, urban planners, and sustainability officers working on decarbonization strategies, particularly those involved in policy design, implementation, or evaluation of renewable energy systems at national or regional levels.

Author:

George Ward

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 21, 2026

Word Count:

79,058 words

Reading Time:

5 hours 32 minutes

Sample:

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8 ratings