Space Industry and Business News  
Bid to unify German environmental law fails: minister

German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel.
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) Feb 1, 2009
Germany's environment minister declared as dead in the water Sunday a mammoth project almost two decades in the making aimed at hacking through the mass of red tape that is German environmental legislation.

"Germany will remain without a simple, transparent, unbureaucratic and all-encompassing environmental rule book," Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel said in a statement. "The existing fragmentation will remain in place."

At present each of Germany's 16 states has its own set of regulations on issues such as pollution, making the approval process for firms planning new projects like roads or factories highly bureaucratic and complex.

In the 1980s it was decided to try and simplify the system and in 1997, then environment minister Angela Merkel -- now chancellor -- proposed a new, one-size-fits-all set of regulations to speed things up.

When Merkel's CDU/CSU conservatives and the centre-left Social Democrats formed the ruling "grand coalition" in 2005 it was something both parties promised they would make happen.

The government was also hoping that less red tape would help speed up the billions of euros (dollars) worth of infrastructure projects with which Berlin aims to pull Europe's biggest economy out of its worst post-war recession.

But with seven months to go before general elections -- when both parties aim to ditch the other and form a coalition with another party -- Gabriel on Sunday said agreement was impossible in the current legislative period.

Gabriel, who is from the SPD, said that with a lack of readiness to compromise the CDU/CSU -- which in turn blamed Gabriel -- was "damaging the economy and the environment at the same time."

The German branch of Friends of the Earth, BUND, said there was now a danger of a "race to the bottom" among German states to relax environmental regulations in order to attract investment.

Related Links
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Geo-engineering 'useful' against climate change: study
Paris (AFP) Jan 28, 2009
Massive, futuristic schemes to spur land and sea into sucking up greenhouse gases may help the fight against global warming but are no substitute for reducing the pollution itself, scientists said Wednesday.







  • Wireless At WARP speed
  • SPTI-BOLDT Group Argentina Chooses Hughes Broadband Satellite System
  • Online encyclopedia Wikipedia may tighten editing rules
  • LBiSat And Alianza Team To Provide High-Quality VoIP To Remote Regions

  • New Ariane 5 Arrives In French Guiana
  • Russia Makes First Space Launch Of 2009
  • Arianespace Begins Payload Integration For First Ariane 5 Of 2009
  • Delta II Scheduled To Light Morning Sky At Vandenberg

  • First China-assembled Airbus set for May test flight: report
  • New Airbus joint-venture with China announced
  • New Turbines Can Cut Fuel Consumption For Business Jets
  • Air China expects to post 'significant loss' for 2008

  • Communications And Power Industries Awarded Contract Supporting US Navy's NMT Program
  • Second Wideband Global SATCOM Satellite Shipped To Cape Canaveral
  • TSAT Set To Speed Up Data Rates Across The Air Force
  • Increasing Joint Battlefield Operation Effectiveness

  • State-Of-The-Art Grating For Gaia
  • ISRO-Built Satellite Fails After Five Weeks
  • Eutelsat Statement On The W2M Satellite
  • Japan's Fujitsu scraps HDD head business

  • Raytheon Makes Executive Changes In Space Business
  • George Preston Chosen For 2009 Henry Norris Russell Lectureship
  • Stevens New Director Of Communications And Public Outreach For Space Foundation
  • ATK Appoints Blake Larson To Lead Space Systems Group

  • NOAA-N Completes Flight Readiness Review
  • NASA Tracks A Green Planet Called Earth
  • New Steps In ESA Cooperation For GMES Program
  • The Orbiting Carbon Observatory And The Mystery Of The Missing Sinks

  • GPS-Enabled Handsets Expected To Bypass The Economic Downturn
  • Toyota Announces Strategic Partnerships
  • Mio Technology Gives Navigation A New Spirit
  • Pennsylvania Trapper Captures New York Coyote

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement