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Germany to invest in everyday shelters, shifting from Cold War bunkers

By Thomson Reuters May 20, 2026 | 10:23 AM

May 20 (Reuters) – Germany’s government approved a new Civil Defense Plan on Wednesday, shifting from Cold War bunkers to everyday sites such as ​underground parking garages, tunnels and subway stations.

Debate ‌over civil defense has intensified in Europe since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and Germany has sharply increased military spending since then.

The plan is part-funded from a special ‌fund ​exempt from debt rules that ⁠was approved last year, ⁠the Interior Ministry said.

Germany currently has 579 shelters for around 480,000 people, many of which have not been in use since the Cold War, according ​to government data released with the plan.

The government plans to invest €10 billion ($12 billion) to boost civil ⁠defence, alongside a wider military ⁠spending drive.

The money will be used ​to buy more than 1,000 special vehicles and protective suits ​and to upgrade the mass alert network.

The ‌Interior Ministry also plans to install a central control unit to coordinate work across public entities.

“This concept from the 1980s, which has never worked, must be ⁠discarded in today’s modern security environment”, said Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt. He said the new plan aims to improve ⁠protection in people’s ‌homes and provide quicker access to ⁠safe places in public spaces.

Defence Minister ​Boris Pistorius ‌said the plan was based on ​lessons from ⁠Ukraine, where an app warns civilians of attacks and urges them to seek shelter. “We can never expect to have a shelter for all 80 million Germans,” Pistorius said.

(Reporting by Markus Wacket, writing by Lena Rueckerl, editing ​by Kirsti Knolle)