vbw – Bavarian Industry Association
2023
The traffic lights are on red – at least in the context of the 11th Energy Transition Monitoring, conducted by Prognos for the Bavarian Industry Association (vbw). Two areas that in the previous year were on green, have deteriorated: Greenhouse gas emissions and the share of renewable energy in electricity consumption. Only the power outage times remains on green, with all other indicators in the negative range.
Dr Almut Kirchner, energy and climate protection expert at Prognos emphasises: “Germany and Bavaria have intensified their climate targets – but the measures and instruments are not sufficient for achieving these targets in the long term. The 11th Energy Transition Monitoring shows: The implementation and action gap has grown. In the long term, only the expansion of renewable energies will help, combined with the increased use of efficiency technologies in industry, the thermal transition, and the transport transition.”
In our annual energy transition monitoring, we examined four areas that we classified and evaluated for the vbw:
1. Security of supply
2. Affordability
3. Energy efficiency & renewables
4. Environmental compatibility
We have been investigating to what extent Germany is meeting its energy targets and where expansion is needed since 2012. For the first time, for this monitoring covering 2021, we looked at the data on gas consumption as well as on climate and environmental compatibility. Where data on 2022 were available, they were partly incorporated into the evaluation.
Compared to 2020, overall energy consumption increased again. Only in the transport sector was consumption still below the level of 2019. In the fourth quarter of 2021, fossil fuels such as gas also became scarce – reflected in significantly higher energy prices, which continued to rise sharply in 2022. A stronger expansion of renewable energies could at least cushion this sharp price increase.
Overall, the indicators we have collected suggest that: In Germany, the energy transition is progressing too slowly. As the expansion of renewable energies in particular has been paralysed, a great deal will have to happen in the coming years to ensure that Germany achieves its energy and climate goals.
Download study (PDF, in German)
More information (vbw website)
Project team: Dr Almut Kirchner, Sven Kreidelmeyer
Last update: 20.1.2023
Dr. Almut Kirchner präsentiert in München die aktuellen Ergebnisse des 11. Monitorings der Energiewende.
Partner, Director
Project Manager
For the Council of Experts on Climate Change we conducted an expert appraisal to review the Federal Environment Agency’s greenhouse gas projection data.
Energy consumption for industry, buildings and transport has remained relatively stable for the last 20 years. A study for the German Industry Initiative for Energy Efficiency (DENEFF) shows how policy can use efficiency measures to counteract this stagnation.
For over 15 years now Prognos has been bringing together the actors concerned by the expansion of the electricity grid and facilitating dialogue between them – from the Danish to the Swiss bor-der.
The energy transition is still lagging behind its goals – such are the findings of our 12th Monitoring Report. In two of the four areas, the lights remain on red.
What is the status of the energy transition in Germany? Since 2012, Prognos has been monitoring the energy transition in Bavaria and Germany on behalf of the vbw.
In the coming years new renewable power plants will have to be built – but also flexible gas power plants, which can be used when required. We examined various incentive instruments on behalf of the vbw.
The Federal Government has commissioned Prognos and other scientific institutes to analyse the climate impact of current state subsidies: Which measures are climate-damaging, which are climate-friendly?
How has the role of gas changed as a result of the gas crisis? Our energy team explored this question on behalf of the KfW.
The extension of the energy network lays the foundation for the energy transition. Since 2019, Prognos has been supporting transmission system operator TenneT TSO GmbH with their project communication concerning the establishment of the new West Coast transmission line in Schleswig-Holstein.
Our study for the vbw compares electricity and gas prices for industry worldwide and provides a price development outlook up to the year 2030.
Prognos is one of the oldest economic research centres in Europe. Founded at the University of Basel, Prognos experts have been conducting research for a wide range of clients from the public and private sectors since 1959 – politically independent, scientifically sound.