German Bundestag, Plenarprotokoll 20/162, pp. 20812-20813.
Right honorable President.
Valued colleagues.
After many errors and
confusions, the Union again professes nuclear power. This could be debated
long, wide and sarcastically. Yet I simply leave it and say: Welcome back to
the rational side of German energy policy.
This is besides an energy policy
represented by the AfD since 2013, thus from the time of our formation. Your
obligatory expressions for an acknowledgment of the renewables of course still
appear in a motion, yet have already retired from your demands, and that is a
step forward. Finally recognized is that a reliable and economic electricity
supply with contingent energies, dependent on season and weather, is not
feasible, and is thus a risk for Germany as a business venue.
Herr Träger, last weekend,
electricity customers needed to pay up to 56 euros per megawatt-hour in electricity
disposal costs so that the German excess electricity production could be dumped
in foreign countries.
Generally, a comparison with
foreign countries, for example France which you so readily criticize, is eye-opening.
German is faced with around 500 billion euros in system integration costs for
the massive construction of the network. France does not need this
construction. France will not need a hydrogen core network for 20 billion
euros.
Harald
Ebner (Greens): Nevertheless!
France does not need 16 billion
euros every 20 years for large electricity storage facilities. And electricity
disposal costs for excess electricity no French electricity customer will ever
need pay.
Beatrix
von Storch (AfD): Hear, hear!
Yet what France does have, Herr
Träger, are emission values of around 20 grams CO2 per kilowatt-hour of
electricity. I venture in this place a prognosis: With your energy policy,
Germany will never achieve this value. 15 million tons of CO2 – for
the science-adverse Ampel coalition,
the most dangerous substance on Earth – since the final exit from nuclear power
in 2023 will each year additionally be emitted in the German energy sector.
Harald Ebner (Greens): Wrong! Wrong! Less than
ever!
To 2030, that will total up to
around 90 million tons of CO2. For the Ampel, it’s all the same.
Harald
Ebner (Greens): No, that’s simply not right! Fake news!
Dear colleagues of the SPD, Greens
and FDP, finally admit that, for you, CO2 emissions are all the
same! For you, it’s only about an ideology, business nepotism for the re-distribution
of tax billions, and the patronizing of the citizens. Throughout Europe, the
hydrogen preliminary projects are dying:
Harald
Ebner (Greens): Remain with the atom!
Lately, the H2 Sines
Rotterdam project in the billions; earlier, the German lighthouse project “West
Coast 100” in Heide. Other projects like Uniper in Rotterdam are put off for
the present. Nevertheless, billions in tax monies, provided for in means of promotion,
die in one project after another. Yet in the BMWK [Economy and Climate Ministry], one continues to ride the dead
hydrogen horse.
It is thus right and important
that the Union sees it as does the AfD, and that the society-splitting firewall
falls in the energy policy. Doubts are nevertheless brought up, dear Union. The
Union demands forbidding the decommissioning until a new government can
conclusively clarify the question. It naturally needs be said more precisely:
Until a new Chancellor and his coalition partner decide this. Since it well
needs be asked, dear Union. How, with a Green coalition partner, do you want to
introduce the fundamental, required change of direction in the German energy
policy?
Dear Union, if you seriously
mean it with the return of nuclear energy and an end of the catastrophic green
energy policy, then one thing is clear: The firewall must go!
Harald
Ebner (Greens): Oje, oje!
To sum up. Dear colleagues, your
motion goes in the right direction. We agree with it, even if it is
faint-hearted and lets miss precisely what this country in the present economic
situation urgently requires: A basic avowal for a fundamental, long-term and
reliable change of direction in the German energy policy. Since the contingent
energies with immense integration costs do not deliver what our industry and
citizens need. You thus have a choice: Either you sell out the welfare of our
country in an ideological coalition with the Greens, or you decide for
cooperation in energy policy with the AfD.
[trans: tem]