. Earth Science News .
Analysis: Nuclear vs. renewable in Germany

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Stefan Nicola
Berlin (UPI) Mar 6, 2009
Renewable and traditional energy companies have launched a war of words over Germany's future energy mix, a divisive issue increasing in prominence roughly half a year before Germans head to the polls to vote for a new government.

The dispute centers around one question: Will Germany stick to its decision to phase out nuclear energy or not?

The current government, made up of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives and the center-left Social Democrats, is at odds over this.

If the Social Democrats become the big winners of the Sept. 27 election, then Germany's remaining 17 nuclear power stations, which in 2007 provided 21 percent of the nation's power, will be shut down by 2021. If Merkel's conservatives win, however, then the country will see a nuclear revival.

That is a scenario that has German renewable-energy companies worried. On the back of smart policies, government subsidies and constant innovation, the German renewable industry has raced to global leadership. It now aims to fundamentally change Germany's energy mix.

In 2020 renewables are to satisfy 47 percent of Germany's power mix -- more than triple the share of today, which stands at 15 percent.

To achieve that goal, nuclear power plants need to be shut down, the industry claims.

"Sticking to the phaseout is a key prerequisite for continuing development of our sector. It's our investment security," Bjoern Klusmann, the head of a German renewable industry association, said Wednesday in Berlin.

"We don't need nuclear," he said. "Renewables fulfill best the energy-political triptych of supply security, economic feasibility and environmental sustainability."

Yet six months before Germans head to the polls, the established energy giants, which only recently began to invest in renewables, are openly attacking the renewable-energy sector.

The head of German energy company RWE, Juergen Grossmann, said in an interview with a German business magazine that subsidies for renewables are a "support program for Russian gas," calling wind power an unstable provider requiring gas-fired power plants that would have to supply base-load capacities.

His company would continue to build nuclear power stations outside of Germany, for example in Britain, he added.

Klusmann contested the notion that Germany, which imports roughly a third of its gas from Russia, will have to buy even more.

"A greater renewable-energy portfolio means less gas, less nuclear and less coal," he said.

When it comes to installed capacity, Germany is the biggest wind-energy market in the world. But its total share stands at just more than 6 percent of the power mix.

Because wind strengths vary greatly, wind-power generation is highly fluctuating, and technology is still young that could harness and store electricity during peak wind and distribute during the lulls. This is not only putting strains on electricity grids. It also means that constantly producing units such as nuclear or gas-fired power plants have to provide base load.

Another option is that wind power from peak production times would be stored -- in batteries (think electric cars) or large water-based storage plants. In Denmark, for example, wind supplies 20 percent of the power -- a share deemed impossible by many experts only 20 years ago.

The Danes accomplished this in part by regional cooperation; when Denmark's wind output is high -- for example, at night -- it sends excess capacities to Norway, which can then close the valves in its hydro power plants and open them even more during the day to send power back to Denmark. Germany has similar arrangements with storage dams in Austria and Switzerland.

More storage plants are currently being built in the Alps to accommodate the growing share of wind energy, said Ralf Bischof, head of a German wind-energy industry group.

It remains to be seen how much additional wind power Germany will get, however.

The financial crisis has slowed down growth in the sector; several offshore wind parks had been planned for Germany's North and Baltic Sea coasts, but they have been delayed or even canceled.

"It's true; offshore currently has a financing problem," Bischof said. "But there won't be a supply problem, even if offshore doesn't come. We will be able to satisfy demand, no matter what."

(snicola@upi.com)

Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links




Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Obama To The "Green" Rescue
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 06, 2009
President Obama has pledged to make green priorities his priorities - and thus far he appears to be keeping his word.







  • Corruption linked to China TV tower blaze: report
  • Landslide kills schoolchildren in PNG
  • Pilot in California crash opted to fly over homes
  • Landslide buries Peru village, 13 dead, 30 missing

  • 'Albatross' gone, India offers hand to US
  • Washington new center of global warming battle
  • Climate Change Heating Up Future Wars Part Three
  • Wenchuan Earthquake Mudslides Emit Greenhouse Gas

  • Scientists Expose Buried Fault That Caused Deadly 2003 Quake
  • GOES-O Satellite Arrives At KSC For Final Pre-Launch Testing
  • Three ESA Earth Science Missions Move To Next Phase
  • Earth-Observing Landsat 5 Turns 25

  • China insists gas field its own business despite Japanese protests
  • Analysis: Nigeria oil strike looming
  • Analysis: Ukraine-Russia gas dispute
  • Nigeria: potential gas hotspot, on frontline for climate change

  • Wild birds likely caused HK H5N1 outbreak: official
  • Update Presented On Disease In Pork Plant Workers
  • Predicting When Invasive Species Can Travel More Readily By Air
  • Bird flu suspected in girl's death

  • New footage shows rare rhinos in Indonesia: WWF
  • Tiger kills ninth man in Indonesia: official
  • Quarter of antelope species face extinction: IUCN
  • Climate change bad news for most birds: study

  • Pilot of ship in San Francisco spill pleads guilty
  • Nitrogen And Phosphorus Reductions Needed To Combat Eutrophication
  • Russian navy accepts blame for oil spill off Ireland
  • Polluters pay under Obama's 'green' budget

  • Malaysian archaeologists find site of pre-Angkor civilisation
  • Evidence Appears To Show How And Where Frontal Lobe Works
  • Chilli Peppers Continue To Help Unravel Mechanism Of Pain Sensation
  • Analysis: Congress on Mex border violence

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement