Germany
In late 2010, Germany initiated the Energiewende, a major plan for making its energy system more efficient, supplied mainly by renewable energy sources. The country has adopted a strategy for an energy pathway to 2050, which includes an accelerated phase-out of nuclear power by 2022.
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In order to achieve the ambitious Energiewende by 2030 the goals are clear: half of all electricity supply will come from renewable energy sources and coal use will be phased out by 2038. Germany has been an early leader in offshore wind and solar PV and increased its targets with 20 GW of offshore wind by 2030 and 40 GW by 2040, alongside investments in 5 GW of hydrogen by 2030.
In its 2020 policy review, the IEA underlines that Germany needs to boost cost-effective market-based approaches to support the forecasted growth of variable renewable generation. The costs and benefits of the energy transition need to be allocated in a fair and transparent way among all sectors and end-users. In particular, emissions reductions from heat and transport require additional policy impetus.
To foster a secure and affordable transition, transmission and distribution networks must expand in parallel with renewable energy capacity. As nuclear and coal-fired generation are being phased out, the monitoring of Germany’s ability to meet electricity demand at peak times should continue in the medium term.
The 2020 IEA in-depth review provides recommendations to help the country guide the transition of Germany’s energy sector.
In its 2020 policy review, the IEA underlines that Germany needs to boost cost-effective market-based approaches to support the forecasted growth of variable renewable generation. The costs and benefits of the energy transition need to be allocated in a fair and transparent way among all sectors and end-users. In particular, emissions reductions from heat and transport require additional policy impetus.
To foster a secure and affordable transition, transmission and distribution networks must expand in parallel with renewable energy capacity. As nuclear and coal-fired generation are being phased out, the monitoring of Germany’s ability to meet electricity demand at peak times should continue in the medium term.
The 2020 IEA in-depth review provides recommendations to help the country guide the transition of Germany’s energy sector.
Last updated Dec 16, 2021
Key energy statistics
Germany data explorer
Analysis
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Germany 2020
Energy Policy Review
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Fuel economy in Germany
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Renewables 2020
Analysis and forecast to 2025
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Germany's legislation on oil security
Part of Oil Security Toolkit
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Case Study: Energy Savings Meter Programme in Germany
German Government
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Oil Market Report - December 2017
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Oil Market Report - May 2017
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Oil Market Report - March 2017
Events
01 Dec 2023 14:00—15:30
May 2022
IEA Contributions to the G7 in 2022
19 May 2022
Achieving Net Zero Heavy Industry Sectors in G7 Members
02 Dec 2020 09:00—12:00
IEA-ICAP-KAS Carbon Pricing Dialogue - Mitigation strategies and carbon pricing in the Asia-Pacific
Latest news
IEA Executive Director addresses world leaders at G7 Summit in Germany
IEA welcomes G7 Leaders’ commitment to reach net zero by 2050
IEA policy review commends Germany’s ambitious efforts to advance its clean energy transition
Policies are critical to helping wind and solar PV to become a bigger part of the energy mix
Policies
Policy
Country
Year
Status
Jurisdiction
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Germany 2023 In force National
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Germany 2023 Announced National
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Germany 2022 In force National
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Germany 2022 In force National