this post was submitted on 02 Apr 2026
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[โ€“] Jesus_666@lemmy.world 10 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

A few additions:

The solar industry didn't just lose subsidies, the government actively tried to prevent the installation of new solar panels.

The nuclear exit actually made a bit of sense; our existing NPPs were mostly old and extending their like was getting increasingly uneconomic. At the same time we had very few locations where new ones could be built. They actually had a solid economic case for the nuclear exit.

They even had a good plan for the exit itself, letting existing contacts run out and simply not renewing them. Then they decided to exit the nuclear exit, renewing all of the contracts. Then, after the Fukushima disaster, they decided to exit the exit from the nuclear exit and immediately terminated all contracts, having to pay large penalties for the early termination.

For twenty years they followed the "Black Zero" plan, which amounted to trying to incur no new debt on the federal level whatsoever, no matter what. As a result, they spent basically nothing on infrastructural upkeep and the army and then suddenly found themselves having to take on 100 billion euros in emergency debt because bridges were collapsing, trains had no usable tracks and the Bundeswehr is unable to actually fight.

The CDU/CSU are mind-bogglingly inept at handing the economy.

[โ€“] kossa@feddit.org 4 points 11 hours ago

and immediately terminated all contracts, having to pay large penalties for the early termination.

That was actually a solid move to funnel large sums of money toward the big energy companies, which they had not received otherwise. So all according to plan.