WORLD / EUROPE
German Greens propose climate veto on all government policies
Published: Aug 04, 2021 05:13 PM
Members of German Green party on Wednesday protest mining with a 3D pavement drawing in front of a government building in Potsdam. Photo:IC

Members of German Green party on Wednesday protest mining with a 3D pavement drawing in front of a government building in Potsdam. Photo:IC

Germany's Green party said Tuesday that it would seek to introduce a new climate protection ministry with the power to veto government policies if it becomes part of the next coalition following September's general elections. 

The proposed new ministry would be able to veto proposals of any nature from other ministries which were "incompatible" with the aims of the Paris climate accord of keeping global warming below 1.5 C, said Annalena Baerbock, the party's candidate running for Angela Merkel's post.

"This is about finally taking on the huge, century-defining task of becoming climate neutral," said Baerbock as she presented the Greens' climate protection program at an event in a nature reserve in Biesenthal, just outside Berlin.

"The climate crisis is not an abstract idea, it is happening right here among us," she added, pointing to recent deadly floods which claimed nearly 200 lives in western Germany. 

If they were voted into government, the ecologists said they would set up a climate task force to speed up policy-making in the first 100 days of the new coalition, to be overseen by the new climate ministry. 

The ministry would also be able to shoot down suggestions from other ministries if they were "incompatible with Paris," said Baerbock.

"The pressure to act is high," said the environmental party's co-leader Robert Habeck, adding that climate protection affected all other political issues. 

The party also announced its intention to set up a "climate budget" of around 15 billion euros ($17.8 billion), introduce higher carbon prices and bring forward Germany's planned coal exit by eight years to 2030.

The Greens are currently polling second behind Merkel's conservative CDU/CSU alliance as Baerbock and CDU leader Armin Laschet vie to succeed the departing veteran chancellor. 

Having briefly led the polls in the spring, the Greens have since slipped behind the conservatives after a series of blunders derailed Baerbock's campaign. 

A recent survey by pollsters Forsa put them five points behind the CDU/CSU on 21 percent, while Yougov have them 12 points behind on 16 percent. 

AFP