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Towards a Climate-neutral Germany. Policy Options for the Technological Transition, Reducing Consumption and Carbon Management

Authors

Ragwitz,  Mario
External Organizations;

Weidlich,  Anke
External Organizations;

Biermann,  Dirk
External Organizations;

Brown,  Tom
External Organizations;

Dütschke,  Elisabeth
External Organizations;

Fischedick,  Manfred
External Organizations;

Fuß,  Sabine
External Organizations;

Geden,  Oliver
External Organizations;

Jochem,  Patrick
External Organizations;

Kost,  Christoph
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/Gunnar.Luderer

Luderer,  Gunnar
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

Neuhoff,  Karsten
External Organizations;

Wagemann,  Kurt
External Organizations;

Wiee,  Frauke
External Organizations;

Winkler,  Jenny
External Organizations;

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Citation

Ragwitz, M., Weidlich, A., Biermann, D., Brown, T., Dütschke, E., Fischedick, M., Fuß, S., Geden, O., Jochem, P., Kost, C., Luderer, G., Neuhoff, K., Wagemann, K., Wiee, F., Winkler, J. (2024): Towards a Climate-neutral Germany. Policy Options for the Technological Transition, Reducing Consumption and Carbon Management, (Series on Science-Based Policy Advice), Munich : acatech/Leopoldina/Akademienunion, 118 p.
https://doi.org/10.48669/esys_2024-11


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_30763
Abstract
To achieve a climate-neutral energy supply, Germany will need to roll out the relevant technologies and expand the necessary infrastructure. It will need more renewable energy, more heat pumps, more electric mobility and upgraded electricity and hydrogen grids. But this alone will no longer be enough to achieve climate neutrality. Experts from the Academies’ Project ESYS have investigated how Germany can become climate-neutral.