As predicted, the Greens became by far the biggest part in the German state of Baden-Württemberg today, getting almost 1/3 of the votes.
Good to see the extreme right AfD lose 4 %points compared to 2016.
Voters in Baden-Württemberg saw climate & environment as the second most important problem, behind corona.
After 5 years in a coalition government with the CDU, 59% of all voters saw the Greens as most competent on climate action, their #2 issue.
32% of young people voting for the first time in Baden-Wurttemberg’s state elections voted for the Greens as well with an even larger distance to the #2 than overall. And less AfD too.
In the end, the Greens got 32.6% of the vote in Baden-Württemberg.
And the extreme-right AfD lost over 5% to end up in fifth place (third last time).

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Kees van der Leun

Kees van der Leun Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @Sustainable2050

13 Mar
A week with two faces, in German electricity production:
Hardly any wind in the first half, with quite some coal and gas running. Then a sudden change on Wednesday followed by days with lots of wind, completely squeezing out fossil electricity.

energy-charts.info/charts/power/c…
Yesterday morning, 20 GW of solar PV and 44 GW of wind power covered 90% of Germany’s electricity load (71 GW). Together with nuclear, bio(gas) and remaining fossil electricity, 15 GW was left over for electricity exports.
The blue line shows the share of all renewables in Germany electricity production over the course of the week (right axis), reaching up to 81% yesterday morning.
As a percentage of electricity *consumption*, renewable came very close to 100% both then and in the preceding night.
Read 8 tweets
12 Mar
Yesterday, wind produced 29% of all Europe's electricity!
Yesterday's European wind top-5:

By share of total:
1. Denmark 89%
2. Germany 66%
3. Ireland 65%
4. Sweden 37%
5. Belgium 36%

By GWh produced:
1. Germany 1,022
2. France 310
3. UK 305
4. Spain 213
5. Sweden 178
For reference: the 2020 full-year average of wind's share in EU+UK electricity was 16.4%: windeurope.org/data-and-analy…
Read 4 tweets
11 Mar
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Greece, Ireland, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta and the Netherlands ask the EU to come up with an end date for fossil fuel car sales, with the option for member states to go even faster. permanentrepresentations.nl/permanent-repr…
To support this "the current CO2 emissions standards must be strengthened significantly to accelerate the transition towards zero-emission road transport.", and manufacturers should be incentivised to develop and produce new zero emission vehicles.
The 9 member states also ask the EU to strengthen infrastructure for zero-emission mobility. "This will foremost require an extensive deployment of public charging."
Read 5 tweets
26 Feb
There are around 270 million passenger cars in the EU+UK.
Assuming they drive around 12,000 km/year and use around 800 liters of gasoline/diesel for that, their final energy demand is around 8 MWh/year each, and 2,000 TWh in total. That’s around 1/6 of total final energy demand.
If you’d replace all of them by electric cars, those would use 2-2.4 MWh/year each, so around 600 TWh in total.

This would reduce EU+UK final energy demand by over 10% (from 12,000 to 10,600 TWh), and increase electricity demand by 20% (from 3,000 to 3,600 TWh).
So just this passenger car replacement would drive up the share of electricity in EU+UK final energy demand from 25% (3000/12000) to 34% (3600/10600).

OK, that was back of the envelope. Would be nice to redo with more precise numbers, but should be in the ballpark.
Read 4 tweets
26 Feb
The shrinking electricity use of Dutch households, thanks to efficiency. By 2018, the annual consumption per household had already decreased by 15%, from its peak in 2012. A year ago, the PBL agency estimated it would drop by another 10% in 2019 and 2020.
cbs.nl/-/media/_pdf/2…
Latest estimate from @statistiekcbs for 2019: 2,730 kWh per household. Higher than the PBL estimate, but still 16% lower than the peak (3,250 kWh in 2011, according to CBS).
The 2020 consumption will probably have increased due to corona (more at home), but the trend is clear.
So 20% of Dutch households can buy an electric car and charge it at home (I assume 2,500 kWh/year), and average household consumption here will still not be higher than it was in 2011-2012.
Long live LED lighting ;! (and other efficiency improvements).
Read 7 tweets
25 Feb
Who’d have thought?!
The Netherlands led Europe in new wind capacity installed in 2020: +2 GW (1.5 GW offshore, 0.5 GW), ahead of Germany, Norway, Spain, and France!
Also, this was 13% of the EU+UK+Turkey total. Admittedly in not a great year overall.
H/t @VeraBrenzel / @Vision23
Wind power capacity additions in Europe (incl. Turkey) have stagnated around 12-17 GW/year for 9 years in a row now...
.. but @WindEurope sees it moving into the 20 GW/year range from this year onwards (‘realistic expectations’).
Read 7 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!