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Germany unveils climate plan to cut emissions, fossil fuels

By Thomson Reuters Mar 25, 2026 | 6:05 AM

BERLIN, March 25 (Reuters) – Germany set out plans on Wednesday to help it meet 2030 climate targets and reduce its ​dependence on volatile fossil fuel imports, making ‌8 billion euros ($9.28 billion) available to implement the measures.

Although the long-awaited 67-point programme is primarily a response to concerns that Berlin’s climate goals are at risk, ‌it ​comes amid growing fears about ⁠soaring energy prices ⁠and oil and gas flow disruption due to the Iran war.

Europe’s biggest economy aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least ​65% from 1990 levels by 2030 and to be climate neutral by 2045. So ⁠far, however, the reduction ⁠is only about 48% and experts ​say existing policies are insufficient.

The plans include an expansion ​of wind turbine capacity, schemes to boost ‌electric vehicle sales, support for a shift to low-carbon technologies in industry and steps to help forests and soil.

The result will be ⁠savings of more than 25 million tonnes of CO2 by the end of the decade, said the ⁠environment ministry, ‌and reductions of nearly seven billion ⁠cubic metres in natural gas and ​four ‌billion litres of petrol by 2030.

“We ​are modernising ⁠the economy, making society more resilient to crises, and helping nature so it can help us,” said Environment Minister Carsten Schneider.

($1 = 0.8617 euros)

(Reporting by Holger Hansen and Madeline Chambers; editing by ​Matthias Williams)