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How Germany is setting its sights on global carbon removal leadership

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A direct air capture (DAC) unit at the Competence Center for Energy Transition (CC4E) in Hamburg, Germany. Photo: CLEW/Wettengel.

A direct air capture (DAC) unit at the Competence Center for Energy Transition (CC4E) in Hamburg, Germany. Photo: CLEW/Wettengel.

German environment minister Carsten Schneider has announced more than 400 million euros in subsidies to kick-start a market for technologies that remove CO2 from the atmosphere. Support programmes are set to launch as early as 2027 and a long-awaited national strategy on negative emissions is expected to be adopted by the end of the summer. The country aims to become a global leader in carbon removal, an industry that scientists say will be essential to meeting climate targets as the world is set to overshoot the 1.5°C warming limit set by the Paris Agreement.

The German government will support the ramp-up of a market for carbon dioxide removals (CDR) with subsidy programmes starting as early as 2027, environment minister Carsten Schneider has announced. His government would soon adopt the long-awaited strategy on negative emissions to lay out the technologies’ role in German climate policy and set targets. 

“Germany must become the global market leader in this future-oriented sector, as the carbon removal industry has enormous potential and I want to harness it,” Schneider said at an event in Berlin

The country has the necessary technological know-how, the industrial base and a progressive climate policy, which puts it in an excellent position to use export opportunities and create jobs in the field, he said. “My aim is to drive the roll-out of these technologies forward rapidly now,” said the minister, adding that the government’s task now is to create the right framework conditions “and to provide support where necessary.” 

Removing CO2 from the atmosphere and permanently storing it is set to become an increasingly important part of global climate action efforts. Climate researchers expect that global warming will exceed the 1.5°C goal of the Paris Climate Agreement in the 2030s, and that the world must work towards limiting the period of “overshoot” and reducing temperatures after a peak – ultimately by taking more carbon out of the atmosphere than it emits in greenhouse gases. 

We are entering a new phase in climate policy. We will consistently implement measures to prevent and reduce emissions, continue to strengthen natural carbon sinks, and supplement this with the new element of carbon removals.
- Carsten Schneider (German environment minister)

Germany to support carbon removal investments and credits market

Minister Schneider said his ministry would “very soon” finalise the long-term strategy for negative emissions, which has been delayed for years due to the break-up of the previous coalition government. Environment ministry official Thomas Kralinski said the government aims for the full cabinet to adopt the strategy by the end of the parliamentary summer break. In addition, the ministry proposes two subsidy programmes to support the emerging carbon removals market. 

The government would earmark more than 400 million euros for the two support programmes until 2033, said Schneider. “In the long term, we are aiming for the emergence of a market that does not require public support,” he said. 

“With all this, we are entering a new phase in climate policy,” Schneider added. “We will consistently implement measures to prevent and reduce emissions, continue to strengthen natural carbon sinks, and supplement this with the new element of carbon removals.”

German companies seen as well-placed but facing stiff competition

A panel of experts at the event in Berlin agreed that Germany was in a good starting position regarding carbon removal technologies, but that other countries like Denmark, the UK or the US could also take a leading role in the budding industry. 

“We are in a strong position, both in terms of the research landscape – we lead the way in patent applications, for example – and as an industrial hub, for instance with our plant engineering or in the field of measurement technology,” said Corinna Enders, CEO of the German Energy Agency (dena).

We may well become the market leader within Europe, but that also depends on the funding landscape.
-Oliver Geden (SWP)

German companies would also be able to profit in the wider European market that is emerging due to climate targets, said Oliver Geden, a researcher at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP). “We may well become the market leader within Europe, but that also depends on the funding landscape,” he said. He cautioned that it was difficult to predict the economic potential of the carbon removal sector, but “of course it would be a very large market if we need to achieve volumes that correspond to five or more percent of 1990 emissions levels.” 

Jochen Flasbarth, German state secretary in the environment ministry, highlighted that the adoption of energy-intensive carbon removal technologies like direct air capture at a large scale would likely happen in other world regions, where renewable is cheaper to produce. This meant that Germany should focus on developing the necessary technologies, “climbing the learning curve faster than others.” 

This approach by the German government is similar to that regarding the green hydrogen market ramp-up. Germany wants to become a global leader in the technologies, but actual production will likely rather happen in regions of the world with cheaper renewables. 

Next five years are crucial for carbon removal ramp-up – climate scientist

Negative emissions are not an issue for the distant future because investments and relevant regulatory changes must be made or prepared today, said Ottmar Edenhofer, director and chief economist of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). “We now need to find ways to support CDR’s growth, and the next five years will be crucial in determining whether these investments are actually made, particularly when it comes to technical carbon sinks.”

The climate researcher recommended creating a new type of emissions allowance for carbon dioxide removals in the European Union Emissions Trading System (EU ETS). A company would be allowed to emit one tonne of CO2 today, but required to agree to ensure that one tonne of CO2 would be removed from the atmosphere at a certain point in the future. The European Commission is currently reviewing the ETS and plans to make reform proposals on 15 July, and is required to also lay out how carbon removals can be included. 

Author: Julian Wettengel


This article was originally published on Clean Energy Wire under the Creative Commons BY NC ND licence. Read the original article.

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