html5-img
1 / 31

Political Framework for Renewable Energies in Germany

Political Framework for Renewable Energies in Germany. 12th of November 2008 AHK-Program “Renewables Made in Germany” Uusikaupunki, Finland Sebastián Rivera, Ecofys Germany GmbH. Support mechanisms in Germany. The Renewable Energy Act: Feed-in Tariff for electricity

jason-booth
Télécharger la présentation

Political Framework for Renewable Energies in Germany

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Political Framework for Renewable Energies in Germany 12th of November 2008 AHK-Program “Renewables Made in Germany” Uusikaupunki, Finland Sebastián Rivera, Ecofys Germany GmbH

  2. Support mechanisms in Germany • The Renewable Energy Act: Feed-in Tariff for electricity • The Renewable Heat Act and the Market Incentive Program • Tax exemptions replaced by quota

  3. The Renewable Energy Law - EEG • Enacted in 2000, adjusted in 2004 and latest amendments to be in force as from January 1st 2009 • Priority for feed-in of RE • Feed-In Tariffs for Renewable Power • 2005: European Commission attested feed-in tariffs to be an effective and cost efficient instrument

  4. Feed-In Tariffs 2008

  5. EEG-supported installations

  6. EEG effects on technologies

  7. Essential Changes to EEG 2004 • Basic structure retained • Higher requirements for power generating facilities • Improvement of grid management and feed-in conditions for RE • Increase of financial incentives for repowering • Improved framework conditions • Significant changes in tariffs in some RE- sectors (e.g. Biogas)

  8. The Renewable Heat Act • To come into Force on the 1st of January 2009 • Main Elements: • Obligation for the use of Renewable Energy sources for Heat • Integration of the Budget for the Market Incentive Program within the Law • Incentive to the development of district heating networks

  9. The Renewable Heat Act • Obligation • Building owners obligated to use renewable energy sources • Combination of technologies possible • Exemptions for technical non-feasibility or preservation of historical architecture

  10. The Market Incentive Program MAP • Continuation of MAP 2007 with new focal points and higher budgets • 2008: 350 mio.€ • 2009 - 2012: 500 mio.€ (by Law) • Additional new bonus system for highly efficient facilities and intelligent coupling of different renewable energy sources • Additional subsidies for efficient heat pumps

  11. MAP - Comparison 2007/2008

  12. State: December 2006 Yearly Cumulative MAP – subsidized installations

  13. Bio-fuels – recent developments • Total bio-fuels until 2014: 6,25 % energetic • Support coupled to cross compliance standards (habitat protection, minimum environmental cultivation standards) • 2011 quota will be revised • Tax reduction of 3 Ct/l for B-100

  14. Renewable fuels in Germany

  15. Current Discussions • Positive energy balance of bioethanol production not always guaranteed • Sustainability certification system (also for imported biomass) • Second generation biofuels need further R&D • Food vs. Fuel

  16. From policy to market – Energy Turnover

  17. From Policy to Market – Construction Turnover

  18. Employment in the Renewable Energy Sector

  19. Germany in the European context • EU-assigned RES-E target for Germany in 2010 is 12.5%  already exceeded in 2007 • National targets for 2020: • Renewable Electricity share: 25-30 % • Renewable Heat share: 14% • Biofuels share: 17% ? • European Commission attested feed-in tariffs to be an effective and cost efficient instrument EU quota system of complementary character

  20. Conclusion policy measures • Big future challenges • German approach has been very successful so far – electricity: targets exceeded • Technologies are available / strong industry has developed • Smart support schemes must aim at making technologies competitive • International cooperation needed

  21. Conclusions • RE are climate friendly, technologically mature, a „job wonder“, highly popular, approaching competitiveness,… => i.e. a widely accepted option for today AND tomorrow • Political will / smart support is essential for further market development • EU Renewable targets: not „burden“ sharing but sharing of new business opportunities

  22. Companies present at this event • Bekon Energy Technologies GmbH & Co KG • Michal Kosuth • epo GmbH • Ansgar Hahn • IMS Ingenieurgesellschaft • Peter Ruland • ROHRPLAN Ing.-Büro für Anlagen- und Rohrleistungsplanung GmbH • Hermman Liess • MAN Turbo AG • Toralf Forstreuter • Omniwatt AG • Torsten Scholl

  23. Further Questions? Sebastian Rivera s.rivera@ecofys.de Ecofys Germany GmbH www.ecofys.de

  24. Further Detailed Information

  25. Renewable power in Germany

  26. Changes to EEG 2004 - Details • Hydropower • Increased tariff for small-scale installations • Ecological criteria for all installations • Uniform support period of 20 years • Biomass • Increased incentives for CHP and Energy Crops (Biogas) • Increased tariff for small-scale installations • Obligation for CHP for installations >5MW

  27. Changes to EEG 2004 - Details • Geothermal Energy • Increased tariff for all installations • Bonus for CHP • Simplification of tariffs • Wind - Offshore • Increased tariff • Degression increased and delayed (2015)

  28. Changes to EEG 2004 - Details • Wind - Onshore • Improved conditions for repowering • Improved grid integration • Photovoltaic • Decreased tariffs • Increased degression

  29. The Renewable Heat Act & the MAP • Market Incentive Program (MAP) will be integrated in the Law • Investment Subsidies for Renewable Heat: 500 Mio € for 2009 - 2012 • Bonus system for highly efficient devices and combination of technologies • Incentives for highly efficient heat pumps

  30. Renewable heat in Germany

  31. EU targets & capacities

More Related