BERLIN (dpa-AFX) - The energy industry is warning of the consequences of a delay in the planned construction of hydrogen-capable gas-fired power plants. The head of Germany's third-largest energy company EnBW, Andreas Schell, told "Der Spiegel": "If the power plant strategy does not come soon, Germany will not be able to phase out coal by 2030." The municipal utilities association VKU warned that any further postponement of the power plant strategy already announced for this summer must be avoided.

A spokeswoman for Economics Minister Robert Habeck said on Friday that the power plant strategy would continue to be developed. It should be presented as soon as possible. With regard to the Karlsruhe budget ruling, she said that everything was connected to everything else. It was a far-reaching ruling. The ministry was sticking to its goal of building hydrogen-capable gas-fired power plants.

Following the ruling of the Federal Constitutional Court, there is a large gap in the federal government's finances. The court had declared the reallocation of coronavirus loans of 60 billion euros from the 2021 budget to the Climate and Transformation Fund null and void. This is used to finance climate protection projects.

Power plants for "dark doldrums"

The German government is relying on renewable energies from wind and solar power to restructure the electricity system - but hydrogen-capable gas-fired power plants are to be built for "dark doldrums". Habeck had announced state subsidies that are likely to be in the billions.

EnBW wants to phase out coal-fired power generation in 2028 and is building three new gas-fired power plants that will also generate hydrogen in the future. "Without planning security, we will not be able to make any further investment decisions," Schell told Der Spiegel.

Ingbert Liebing, Managing Director of the German Association of Local Utilities (VKU), said that the power plant strategy is the central building block for a successful and efficient energy transition by securing the future power supply with flexible power plants. "Otherwise, we face a supply shortfall or the coal phase-out cannot take place as planned." Without a power plant strategy, the risk for investors would be too high and investments would initially fail to materialize. In the worst-case scenario, none of the power plants required for 2030 would be connected to the grid.

Together with the energy company RWE, politicians had agreed to phase out coal eight years earlier in 2030 for the Rhineland coalfield. No such agreement has been reached for the coal regions in Brandenburg, Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt./hoe/DP/jha