New studies raise doubts on power plant law

The federal cabinet approved the power plant law in mid-May. Two recent studies however point to problems with using gas power plants as backup.

The federal economics ministry had described the law as a central milestone for power supply security. The studies presented to Handelsblatt partly contradict this assessment.

They state that periods of low wind and solar output are not an exceptional case. Power curtailments are mentioned as a possible solution.

The analyses thus refine the debate on the need for gas power plants.

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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.

The federal cabinet has approved the draft of the building modernization law. The new legislation replaces the controversial heating law of the previous traffic-light coalition and aims to offer more flexibility in heating choices.

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The Federal Ministry of Economics sees no threat to supply security despite low gas storage levels. Current levels stand at around 28 percent.

The country’s power grid struggled to fully meet peak daytime electricity demand for the first time this summer, with a shortage of 188 MW when demand hit a record 270 GW on Thursday.

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The TCU technical area recommended partial suspension of the homologation of a major energy auction that contracted R$ 515 billion in reserves for thermoelectric and hydroelectric plants.

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