Germany’s climate progress stalls as emissions barely budge
Germany’s climate progress stalls as emissions barely budge Germany likes to think of itself as the sensible grown-up in Europe’s climate conversation: organised, efficient, and good at engineering its way out of trouble. But the latest figures suggest that even the grown-ups can end up staring at the scales and insisting the diet is “basically working” after losing half an ounce. According to the latest data, Germany’s greenhouse gas emissions fell by just 0.1% in 2025 , down to about 648.9 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent . That meant the country only just squeaked under its annual emissions limit, and the result was widely seen as a warning sign rather than a success story. Environment minister Carsten Schneider criticised the pace of progress as far too slow. The awkward bit is this: on paper Germany narrowly met the overall annual ceiling, but key sectors such as transport and buildings again failed to pull their weight. Those two areas have become the climate equivale...