German municipal officials celebrate heating law changes at press conference, highlighting green energy transition and funding needs.
German municipal officials celebrate heating law changes at press conference, highlighting green energy transition and funding needs.
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Municipalities welcome new regulations on heating law

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Germany's municipal associations have positively received the planned changes to the heating law but warn of additional burdens and demand funding. The agreement between the Union and SPD aims to abolish the 65 percent rule for renewables and introduce a gradual shift to climate-friendly fuels. Meanwhile, the Federal Constitutional Court is reviewing the parliamentary process of the original version.

The German federal government is planning adjustments to the heating law, which have been welcomed by municipal associations. Kay Ruge, managing director of the German Association of Counties, called the changes a "right step" and emphasized that they correspond to the "real life of millions of people." He called for more technological openness, less bureaucracy, and the preservation of municipal heat planning, which should be simplified for smaller municipalities. "Planning security is important – politics has lost a lot of trust on this topic in recent years," Ruge criticized.

André Berghegger from the German Association of Cities and Municipalities expressed similar views. He welcomed the agreement, which should provide quick planning security and reliable funding. The key change abolishes the requirement that new heaters must be operated with 65 percent renewables. Instead, installations of new gas or oil heaters remain possible. The Union-SPD coalition plans a "bio-staircase": From 2029, such heaters should run on 10 percent less climate-damaging fuels, with the share increasing to 2040.

Berghegger stated: "A quota for climate-friendly energy carriers in oil and gas heaters can be a building block for flexibility and technological openness in the heat transition." He warned that existing plans by municipalities and utilities must not be jeopardized.

On Thursday, the Federal Constitutional Court addressed the law but examined not its content, but whether parliamentarians had sufficient consultation time in summer 2023. Critics, as in a Handelsblatt commentary, see the changes as a setback for climate goals, since new fossil heaters could operate beyond 2045. A Spiegel report highlights the controversy over biogas use, which is not expected to suffice long-term.

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X discussions on the heating law reforms emphasize relief from abolishing the 65% renewables rule, welcomed by conservative outlets and gas industry for homeowner flexibility and green gas promotion; municipal associations' positive reception with demands for funding and clarity garners minor mention; neutral reports cover changes, while Constitutional Court review of original law draws legal focus.

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German black-red coalition politicians shaking hands on heating law reform, with symbolic heaters and protesting Greens in background.
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Black-red coalition agrees on heating law reform

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The black-red coalition has agreed on key points for reforming the heating law and scrapped the controversial 65 percent rule for renewable energies. Instead, oil and gas heaters will be allowed with increasing shares of green fuels. Environmental groups and the Greens criticize the changes as a setback for climate protection.

The Union and SPD have agreed on the key points of a new Building Energy Act, abolishing the existing heating law. Instead of a 65 percent requirement for renewables, there will be a gradual increase in climate-friendly shares for gas and oil heaters. The reform is set to take effect before July 1.

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Natural gas prices are fluctuating wildly, making heating more expensive for households, as the reform of the heating law stalls. Federal Economics Minister Katherina Reiche missed the January deadline for key points, fueling uncertainty. Experts call for stronger promotion of heat pumps as a cheaper alternative.

The EU Commission has partially rolled back the planned 2035 combustion engine ban, which a study by the think tank Transport & Environment says could lead to higher CO₂ emissions and declining EV sales. The original 100 percent CO₂ reduction was softened to 90 percent, reducing the share of pure electric vehicles to 85 percent. Experts fear job losses in the German automotive industry.

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The black-red coalition plans a comprehensive modernization of the social system to reduce bureaucracy and digitize processes. A commission with representatives from the federal government, states, and municipalities has developed 26 recommendations, which Federal Social Minister Bärbel Bas will present on Tuesday. Planned are fewer authorities, merged benefits, and automatic child benefit, without cuts to social assistance.

Hessen's Minister President Boris Rhein wants no more new pacts with the federal government. He criticizes that such agreements burden the states in the long term and calls for a federalism reform. Rhein also distances himself from Markus Söder's idea of merging federal states.

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A new study in Nature Sustainability reveals that forcing lifestyle changes through climate policies can backfire, weakening pro-environmental values and sparking political opposition. Researchers surveyed over 3,000 Germans and found stronger resistance to green mandates than to COVID restrictions. The findings highlight the importance of policy design in maintaining public support for climate action.

 

 

 

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