Family in winter kitchen alarmed by high gas bill, calendar past January deadline, snowy gas meter outside, contrasted with heat pump alternative.
Family in winter kitchen alarmed by high gas bill, calendar past January deadline, snowy gas meter outside, contrasted with heat pump alternative.
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Natural gas heating becomes cost trap amid delayed law reform

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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.

Gas prices on European energy exchanges dropped by up to 20 percent in the first two days of this week, but meteorologists forecast higher temperatures for Europe and the USA. Such fluctuations are the new normal in global energy trading, raising costs for utilities through hedging transactions.

Norwegian natural gas currently covers nearly half of German demand, supplemented by LNG mainly from the USA. The EU Commission advises broadening procurement to reduce dependencies, though this is costly. A natural gas emergency reserve is necessary to handle shocks like potential attacks on pipelines.

Long-term, natural gas will become a cost trap due to rising CO₂ prices if the EU continues climate protection efforts. Heat pumps are proven cheaper than fossil fuel heating; their sales rose significantly in 2025, primarily in new buildings.

Owners of existing homes are highly uncertain due to disinformation campaigns against the Building Energy Law and heat pumps, as well as the Black-Red coalition's announcement to repeal the law. Minister Reiche (CDU) has failed to provide answers and missed the end-of-January deadline for key points. The Union and SPD want a new law, but impatience is growing ahead of an important date.

A new subsidy program for heating switches is essential to overcome the higher purchase price of heat pumps.

Mitä ihmiset sanovat

Discussions on X criticize Economics Minister Katherina Reiche for delaying the heating law reform past the January deadline, exacerbating uncertainty and high costs for natural gas heating. Greens and experts decry favoritism toward fossil gas over heat pumps, while AfD users highlight broken promises on reform. Sentiments are predominantly negative and skeptical, with calls for multiple technologies and investigations into lobbying.

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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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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.

One year into Donald Trump's second presidency, his administration has undermined clean energy initiatives, including gutting the Inflation Reduction Act's incentives. However, experts highlight that falling renewable prices and surging electricity demand are propelling the shift to clean energy despite federal obstacles. States and cities continue aggressive emission-reduction efforts, creating tension between policy and economic realities.

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Germany's Economics Minister Katherina Reiche is considering limiting fuel price increases at gas stations to once per day, following Austria's example. The rule has been in place there for years to curb fluctuations. Viennese economists highlight benefits in transparency but warn of limited impact.

José Antonio Kast's government issued decrees tweaking the Mepco, allowing historic gasoline and diesel price hikes starting March 26. The move addresses surging oil prices from the Iran war and fiscal tightness, with relief for paraffin and transporters. Congress approved the bill after negotiations exempting SMEs from higher taxes.

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Pääministeri Ulf Kristersson on saanut EU:n huippukokouksessa Brysselissä takeet siitä, että Ruotsin pullonkaulamaksuilla rahoitetaan vain Ruotsin sähköverkon laajentaminen. Varoja ei käytetä eurooppalaisiin hankkeisiin. Samaan aikaan EU:n päästökauppajärjestelmää puolustetaan muutospyyntöjä vastaan.

 

 

 

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