Climate group sues German government for missing targets

German environmentalists on Tuesday sued the government for failing to follow its own laws to protect the climate and reduce emissions.. "We cannot continue to stand by as parts of the federal government ignore their own climate protection goals," BUND chief Olaf Bandt said in a statement. 

German environmentalists on Tuesday sued the government for failing to follow its own laws to protect the climate and reduce emissions.

After missing emissions targets for transport and building in 2021, the government needed to "agree as quickly as possible to a package" to put it back on track, the BUND organisation said in a statement. 

But officials in Berlin had failed to put forward sufficiently effective measures before the legal deadline, the group said.

"We cannot continue to stand by as parts of the federal government ignore their own climate protection goals," BUND chief Olaf Bandt said in a statement. 

"A political decision is needed now to create effective measures for climate protection," Bandt said.

"If (Chancellor) Olaf Scholz's government is not politically able or willing to do so, it must be forced to legally," he said.

In 2021, the transport sector overshot its CO2-emissions target by 3.1 million tonnes, according to BUND. In the building sector, the equivalent figure was 2.5 million tonnes.

Officials presented a roadmap to reduce emissions in the two sectors more quickly in July 2022. 

But the government's expert commission on climate questions criticised the proposals for failing to go far enough.

In a ground-breaking case, Germany's constitutional court ruled in 2021 that the government's climate plans were insufficient and placed an unfair burden on future generations.

In response, the government led by then-chancellor Angela Merkel tightened the timeline of plans to slash emissions and brought forward its goal of becoming carbon neutral by five years to 2045.

Germany missed its total CO2-reduction goal in 2022 by around five million tonnes, according to the energy think tank Agora Energiewende.

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© Agence France-Presse

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