Graph of the Day: Germany’s tiny renewables costs

Published by

Lenz Blog

This interesting and beautiful graph was recently published by the German Renewable Energy Agency (Agentur für Erneuerbare Energien). It shows the increases of energy costs per month for the average German household from 2000 on. The tiny, small, barely visible violet part at the top is the cost of the feed-in tariff surcharge.

We see an increase in surcharge costs of EUR 14 per month from 2000 to 2013. But at the same time, other costs of electricity increased even more (by EUR 25 a month).

And the cost of heating oil increased by EUR 66, the cost of gasoline by EUR 53 a month. In comparison, the cost of the surcharges is rather small.

In total, energy costs increased from EUR 198 a month to EUR 356, or by EUR 158. The surcharge costs are less than ten percent of that.

Most of the cost increases come from the fact that the oil price has gone up by a factor of five in that decade. I expect more of the same in the future.

That of course means that in the long term it is much cheaper to have a fast transition to renewable than a slow one, even if the costs of the present speed were substantial, which they are not.

This article was originally published on Lenz Blog. Reproduced here with permission

– See more at: http://k.lenz.name/LB/?p=10013#sthash.HODGzRDI.dpuf

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Contentious solar project scrapped after work fails to start on time

After another change of hands, a solar project opposed by some locals has missed its…

7 April 2026

Coal to liquids: Coalition’s latest energy brain-fart is their craziest yet, and that takes some doing

Coalition's proposed solution to the fossil fuel crisis is its craziest yet. Meanwhile, credible solutions…

7 April 2026

Local council seeks annual $100,000 per road maintenance fee from wind and solar developers

A council at the heart of major wind and solar projects wants renewable energy developers…

7 April 2026

Home batteries get bigger and bigger, as race to beat rebate changes sparks last-ditch frenzy

A last-ditch scramble to get maximum value from the Cheaper Home Batteries rebate has "shattered"…

7 April 2026

Bill shock: The up to $420 price gap between “median” electricity plans and lowest deals on offer

Difference between median retail electricity market offers and the lowest offer available to households could…

7 April 2026

The market rule maker has hit its limit on gas. Now it’s government’s turn

With submissions closing April 30 on a landmark gas network rule change, the real question…

7 April 2026