Germany is setting new climate change targets for cutting emissions after a court ruled its current goals contravene the rights of children and young adults.
Ministers now want to bring forward the country’s switch to climate neutrality – or net-zero carbon emissions – by five years to 2045.
Berlin announced the move on Wednesday after the country’s constitutional court deemed a flagship climate protection law “insufficient”.
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s CDU party and its centre-left coalition partner the SPD are lagging behind the Greens in popularity surveys.
“We want to make our goals more precise,” Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said.
The court ruled last Thursday that German emissions targets did not set a clear enough timeline for emissions reductions beyond 2030.
Current measures could “irreversibly offload major emission reduction burdens” on to the period after 2030, thereby impeding the freedom of future generations, it said.
It demanded that the government set annual emission targets for the period after 2030 in an improved plan to be put forward by December next year.
The government now aims to reduce emissions to 65 per cent of 1990 levels by 2030 and 88 per cent by 2040.
“Young people have reminded us that we are going too slowly rather than too quickly,” Mrs Merkel said.
She said the constitutional court ruling made clear that “you can’t just have freedoms for the generations alive today, you must also think about the freedoms of future generations”.
“This is a new legal perspective that could have many consequences and impresses upon us that we must do more.”
With the general election imminent, in September, the government is under pressure to show it takes environmental issues seriously.
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David Haye record
Total fights: 32
Wins: 28
Wins by KO: 26
Losses: 4
Killing of Qassem Suleimani
Cultural fiesta
What: The Al Burda Festival
When: November 14 (from 10am)
Where: Warehouse421, Abu Dhabi
The Al Burda Festival is a celebration of Islamic art and culture, featuring talks, performances and exhibitions. Organised by the Ministry of Culture and Knowledge Development, this one-day event opens with a session on the future of Islamic art. With this in mind, it is followed by a number of workshops and “masterclass” sessions in everything from calligraphy and typography to geometry and the origins of Islamic design. There will also be discussions on subjects including ‘Who is the Audience for Islamic Art?’ and ‘New Markets for Islamic Design.’ A live performance from Kuwaiti guitarist Yousif Yaseen should be one of the highlights of the day.