German economy minister says power plant strategy imminent

Reuters

Published Jan 23, 2024 10:51

Updated Jan 23, 2024 11:34

By Vera Eckert and Markus Wacket

BERLIN (Reuters) -Germany's Economy Minister Robert Habeck on Tuesday said a much-anticipated roadmap for how a new generation of gas-fired power plants would be put out to tender was imminent, fuelling hopes of financial support for the construction of these stations.

The plan, with an estimated cost of up to 40 billion euros ($43.5 billion), aims to ensure enough electricity generation until renewable energy can overcome storage issues and inadequate grid technology to fully replace fossil fuels.

This is to be achieved via 24 gigawatt of gas-fired and hydrogen capacity by 2035, which will be either be new stations or old ones that are converted.

Habeck would not confirm that the strategy to build power stations that are initially gas-fired but ready for hydrogen to complement volatile renewables would be finalised by the end of Tuesday.

But he told a Q+A session at the annual Handelsblatt energy summit in Berlin, the government would "work out and present the proposals very quickly".

The country's top utility firms - RWE (LON:0HA0), Uniper and EnBW - have called for specific regulation to build the new gas stations that they say would not be economic without state help.

Habeck said there should be provisions to support capital expenditure and running costs until carbon emissions permits were expensive enough to favour clean energy production and disincentivse fossil fuels.

"My idea would be to subsidise part of the capex costs, namely the part that doesn't pay off on the market, and part of the opex costs until the CO2 price takes over," Habeck said during the conference.