A Berlin court has instructed the German government to revise its 2023 climate plan to align with sector-specific 2030 goals. The ruling, issued by the Berlin-Brandenburg Administrative Appeals Court on Thursday, favored the German environmental group DUH.
This marks the second legal blow to Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s administration in recent times.
The court said the amended climate program “doesn’t fully meet the legal requirements, as it does not comply with the binding targets and the specified reduction path for the individual sectors, except for the agriculture sector.”
“The 2023 climate protection program suffers from methodological flaws and is partly based on unrealistic assumptions.”
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Germany’s claim of being on course to achieve its 2030 target of reducing carbon emissions by 65% has been cast into uncertainty. The Council of Experts on Climate Change, an advisory body, has raised doubts, stating that the calculations were grounded on initiatives pledged before October.
However, following the top court’s November ruling, invalidating a crucial aspect of the government’s climate action plans, the funding for many of these initiatives is now deemed “even more questionable.”
“This judgment is a well-deserved slap in the face for the German government’s pseudo climate protection policy,” DUH managing director Jürgen Resch said in a statement.