business
Is Germany looking again at coal-powered electricity?
Key takeaways
- John Laurenson Business reporter AFP via Getty Images Germany currently gets 20% of its electricity from coal-powered stations.
- Germany is the biggest user of coal for power generation in Europe, and the fourth largest in the world after China, India and the US.
- For lignite, the low-quality soft coal that is the most polluting, Germany has even brought the phase out forward to 2030.
John Laurenson Business reporter AFP via Getty Images Germany currently gets 20% of its electricity from coal-powered stations. They have a word for it in German – kohleausstieg, which means "coal phase out".
Germany is the biggest user of coal for power generation in Europe, and the fourth largest in the world after China, India and the US. But it has pledged to stop using it altogether by 2038.
For lignite, the low-quality soft coal that is the most polluting, Germany has even brought the phase out forward to 2030.
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