Climate Change

Germany plans to set 2045 target for climate neutrality

Germany-climate-neutrality-2045

Photo: Pixabay/Kamyq

Published

May 6, 2021

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

May 6, 2021

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Germany plans to bring forward its net zero emissions deadline to 2045, or five years ahead of the European Union’s declared target. Germany’s new climate neutrality target, announced by finance minister Olaf Scholz and environment minister Svenja Schulze, could be adopted by the government in Berlin next week.

According to Scholz and Schulze, the new targets for Germany will be a 65% emissions reduction by 2030, an 85% to 90% reduction by 2040, and net zero emissions by 2045.

The current goals are the same as those of the EU – a 55% reduction in emissions by 2030 and climate neutrality by 2050. The EU has recently reached an agreement to make climate neutrality by 2050 a legally binding target.

The move comes after the top court ruled Germany’s Climate Action Law was “insufficient”

The move comes on the heels of a recent ruling by Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court, which found that the country’s Climate Action Law is insufficient and partly unconstitutional and ordered the government to introduce details on greenhouse gas reduction targets for the period after 2030 by the end of next year, according to Climate Home News.

The case was brought by youth climate activists who argued that the law violated their right to a humane future by failing to go far enough to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius, according to the report.

Berlin seeks to green the steel industry by supporting hydrogen projects

As part of efforts to meet climate targets, the German government is seeking to cut emissions from the steel industry, including by supporting steel mills’ hydrogen projects, Steelguru.com has reported, citing Bloomberg. Making steel production greener would require changes such as replacing coal with hydrogen to heat steelmakers’ furnaces.

According to economy minister Peter Altmaier, the country will need to invest more than EUR 35 billion by 2050 to eliminate emissions from the steel sector, the largest industrial emitter of greenhouse gases.

Germany is hoping to mobilize green investment with the Sustainable Finance Strategy

The government is also trying to attract more investment in climate protection projects through a plan called the Sustainable Finance Strategy, which contains 26 individual measures and is aligned with the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), according to a report by Euractiv, which cited Reuters.

The strategy, aimed at making it easier for investors to identify green investment opportunities through the so-called sustainability “traffic light” labeling system, is hoped to develop Germany into a leading location for sustainable finance.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

davos wef china us green transition

Davos: China reaffirms green agenda as US slams EU’s net-zero goal

21 January 2026 - China reiterated its commitment to green development, in contrast to the US, whose commerce secretary said in Davos that America should rely on oil and gas

eu cbam 2026 go live commission data electricity

CBAM go-live: no electricity imports in week one

16 January 2026 - Iron and steel dominated the CBAM imports declared in the first reporting window, January 1-6, according to the European Commission

slovenia climate vulnerability risks energy assessment

Slovenia draws up first climate vulnerability, risks assessment for energy sector

12 December 2025 - The assessment was prepared by the Ministry of the Environment, Climate and Energy, in cooperation with the Jožef Stefan Institute

eu energy system 2050 net zero scenarios costs hitachi study

Energy system based on renewables is cheapest solution to achieve net zero by 2050 – study

10 December 2025 - The study, produced by Hitachi Energy for WindEurope, has mapped out the total system costs of five energy scenarios