Renewables

Habeck: Fossil fuels for heating are dead end, not way to save

robert habeck Fossil fuels for heating are dead end

Photo: Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action

Published

April 10, 2023

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

April 10, 2023

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

No one should install a natural gas or fuel oil heating system because fossil energy is a dead end, not a piggy bank, Vice-chancellor and Federal Minister of Economic Affairs and Climate Action Robert Habeck said.

Germany is preparing a law on heating installations with the aim to transition from fossil fuels to renewables. From January 1, every new heating system will have to run on at least 65% renewable sources, so it is essentially a ban on new heating devices using fossil fuels. The government’s idea sparked controversies as gas and heating oil are the dominant sources of heating.

Many homeowners are installing or planning to install heating devices running on fossil fuels before the ban comes into effect. In 2022, 600,000 gas and oil heaters were installed in dwellings, compared to 260,000 heat pumps and the connection of 70,000 households to district heating. Biomass is the only other alternative to fossil fuels.

Habeck said emission costs would steadily drive higher the prices of natural gas and heating oil from 2027

Habeck told households it was not a good idea and urged them not to panic “at the last minute.”

A heat pump pays off in 18 years, but prices will soon decrease, he said, Tagesschau reported.

Habeck estimated that prices of natural gas and heating oil would increase steadily from 2027 due to costs of emissions under the European Union’s Emissions Trading System.

The government is preparing subsidies and other benefits to make the transition less painful

It is enough, in his words, for citizens to abandon fossil fuels as a solution for such a long-term investment as heating. However, the government will also introduce subsidies, because gas boilers are cheaper than heat pumps, Habeck added.

To make energy transition less painful, the German government will also offer other incentives.

From the start of next year, households will have to replace gas and heating oil boilers that are beyond repair with cleaner solutions, but people over 80 years old are exempted. Younger citizens will also be eligible to apply for an exemption if they can’t afford the switch, according to Habeck.

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

Wilhelmshavn roman bernard battery system BESS NGEN Uniper Germany

NGEN, Uniper break ground on 100 MWh battery system in Germany

17 April 2026 - The battery system in Wilhelmshaven will balance wind and solar power, supporting grid stability and renewables integration

Parliamentarians Energy Community energy security with MEPs Brussels

Parliamentarians from Energy Community discuss energy security with MEPs in Brussels

16 April 2026 - In focus at the Energy Community Parliamentary Plenum in Brussels was the mutual need to integrate energy markets to protect against price and security of supply shocks

china envision world largest wind solar project

Envision inaugurates world’s largest wind-solar power plant

16 April 2026 - In February, the China-based company commissioned the world’s largest single-site battery energy storage system

Bulgaria ten sites pumped storage hydropower plants repairs Chaira unit

Bulgaria finds ten sites for pumped storage hydropower plants, repairs another Chaira unit

16 April 2026 - Two units in the Chaira system in Bulgaria are functional again, while the government is planning ten pumped storage hydropower projects