German politicians finalizing heating law reform, symbolizing 50/50 landlord-tenant cost sharing for green fuels from 2029.
German politicians finalizing heating law reform, symbolizing 50/50 landlord-tenant cost sharing for green fuels from 2029.
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Coalition finalizes heating law reform with cost-sharing and quotas

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Germany's black-red coalition has finalized its heating law reform, building on February's agreement. Key addition: landlords and tenants will split costs 50/50 for green fuels in new systems, mandatory from 2029 with rising biogenic quotas.

Following the February agreement that scrapped the controversial 65 percent renewable energy rule for new heaters, Germany's CDU/CSU-SPD coalition has now resolved remaining disputes over the Building Energy Act reform, per a coalition paper reported by Handelsblatt.

Landlords and tenants will equally share costs for green fuels like biomethane, as well as gas network fees and CO₂ levies, in newly installed heating systems. From January 1, 2029, new heaters must use biogenic fuels (from renewable materials, animal residues, or green hydrogen), starting at 10 percent and increasing in three stages. Existing systems face a green gas quota from 2028, rising via a four-step 'bio-staircase' by 2040.

Critics argue this still burdens landlords with fossil fuel systems, despite earlier promises of relief.

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Discussions on X largely criticize the heating law reform as a superficial change to Habeck's original law, shifting 50/50 costs for biogenic fuels, CO2, and grid fees to landlords from 2029, potentially leading to higher rents. Right-leaning media and users express skepticism and anger, calling it a lie or backdoor ban. Some SPD voices view it positively as tenant protection. Landlords' concerns are highlighted amid high-engagement posts.

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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.

Eight weeks after the Greens' narrow win in the March state election, they and the CDU have reached a coalition agreement in Baden-Württemberg. Top candidates Cem Özdemir and Manuel Hagel announced it in Stuttgart, with the treaty to be presented next week.

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Chancellor Friedrich Merz stated that the draft health reform bill is »practisch fertig« and will be voted on in the cabinet on Wednesday. Health Minister Nina Warken's (CDU) savings package aims to cut around 19.6 billion euros next year. The proposal faces criticism from associations, health insurers, and parts of the coalition.

On May 1, 2026, electricity prices on the German exchange dropped to minus 499 euros per megawatt hour. High photovoltaic production met low demand on a holiday. Economy Minister Katherina Reiche plans reforms to address this.

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Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson has received guarantees at the EU summit in Brussels that Swedish bottleneck fees will only fund expansion of the Swedish electricity grid. The funds will not be used for European projects. Meanwhile, the EU emissions trading system is defended against calls for changes.

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