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The German Industrial Power in Danger: The Double Shock of Energy Transition and Geopolitical Risk

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The German manufacturing industry at the heart of the German economic activity has been confronted in the past years with conjunctural shocks, which question its existence on the German territory: the energy transition which hinders it in the short term to resort to fossile energy from Germany and nuclear energy; a questioning of fossile energy imports from Russia which keeps production sites of fossile energy and nuclear energy in Germany; the currently small capacity of renewable energy to satisfy the important energy needs of the manufacturing industry and the putting into place of alternatives to the importation of energy resources.

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If the European political pressure and geopolitical crisis with Russia were to perdure and / or grow, energy-intense industries could lead to partial or total closures of emblematic production sites and to the definitive departure from the German soil. The current coalition in Germany which united on a program of energy transition acceleration is brutally confronted with the challenge of an unprecedented industrial and geopolitical reality.

 

Patricia Commun  is professor of German civilization at the University of Cergy-Pontoise, member of the AGORA laboratory, and Director of the Masters in Languages and International Trade UFR LEI.

 

This publication is available in French only: "La puissance industrielle de l'Allemagne" (PDF).

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