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dinkblam 2 hours ago

> Manufacturing in Germany is dying

no surprise given the high taxes, extreme energy prices, massive bureaucracy, ridiculous regulations, work-hating employees and extremely business-hostile culture

cdmckay 2 hours ago | parent [-]

I think it’s mostly the loss of Nord Stream

mx7zysuj4xew an hour ago | parent | next [-]

This is it.

A lot of people seem to be pushing some weird "anti-environmental" when the simple reality is that all energy costs

I cannot understate the impact of Russian Energy being cut off. Right now we're paying roughly twice as much than we used to for compressed natural gas brought via tanker ships from the us. I genuinely believe that the war in Ukraine is mostly about energy dependence on Russia and Ukraine losing its transfer fees through their old pipelines

Phil_Latio 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It's just one piece of the puzzle. The cost for Co2 certificates is a more major reason. Starting 2027, hedge funds can buy these certificates which will be the nail in the coffin. It's basically Bitcoin on steroids with the difference that people buy Bitcoin out of free will, while the industry is forced to buy these certificates which get more scarce over time.

aurelwu an hour ago | parent [-]

Anyone can already buy those certificates - but as its an artificial market where rules can be changed politically it's actually way more resistant to such things than regular markets, so if those hedge funds feel like they want to lose some billions they can certainly do that. There is a large enough stockpile of certificates + leeway when to submit them that any short term market squeeze will just be dealt with politically.

Phil_Latio an hour ago | parent [-]

This argument, namely that politics can lower the price (by emitting extra certificates) when it gets too high, contradicts the whole reason for the mechanism in the first place: They claim a free market can find the right price better than politicians. But then they interfer anyway?

The price will rise much larger than a dumb, fixed increase-schedule would. Because the "market" wants it's profit.

AlexandrB 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

It's the loss of Germany's last nuclear plants in 2023[1]. For a country supposedly aiming for net zero the shutdown of their nuclear infrastructure was a huge "own goal". Really sad to see.

[1] https://www.cnn.com/2023/04/15/europe/germany-nuclear-phase-...

cenamus an hour ago | parent [-]

Strange that the share pf renewables has beem steadily increasing