Germany's future coalition unveils plan to cut electricity costs, boost gas power
Germany's future coalition government of the conservative CDU-CSU bloc and the centre-left Social Democrats agreed to reduce the electricity tax and grid fees in a bid to cut electricity prices in Europe's biggest economy by at least 5 cents per kilowatt-hour.
The parties agreed to introduce incentives to build up to 20 gigawatts of gas power plant capacity by 2030 and to adopt a legislative package to allow carbon capture and storage, or CCS, including for gas-fired power plants.
They also want to abolish a controversial heating law and a gas storage levy which Berlin introduced in 2022 to cover the costs of replacing Russian gas after Moscow cut deliveries.
Tax rebates for diesel fuel in agriculture will be reintroduced along with new purchase incentives for electric vehicles, the coalition agreement said.
- Cheniere signs deal with Bechtel to expand U.S. LNG export capacity
- TC Energy approves $1.5-B Columbia Gas expansion after profit tops estimates
- Wärtsilä continues to expand its data center footprint with new 790 MW order in Texas
- Baker Hughes’ fuel flexible NovaLT™ 16 gas turbine certified by RINA for marine propulsion
- Japan got bulk of Russian LNG from Sakhalin-2 in 2025

Comments