Our Experts Christian Stolte Head of Division Climate-neutral buildings Contact The challenge: Reducing greenhouse gases in Germany by 80 to 95 per cent by the year 2050 requires not only the substant
ABSCHLUSSBERICHT: dena-Netzstudie III More information This was the challenge: Our energy grids for electricity, gas, hydrogen and, on a local level, for heat bring energy supply and demand together.
Stepping on the gas, but doing it right The challenge was as follows: The biomethane industry wanted to advance the feeding-in of biogas into the German natural gas network. Unlike wind and solar ener
The UNECE RE-Uptake project is jointly undertaken by the UNECE, REN21 and dena, and in close cooperation with and commissioned by the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK). T
New markets, new opportunities The challenge was as follows: There is no doubt that Germany is a paragon in the area of renewable energy sources. Companies in the industry possess impressive expertise
The challenge: The European energy transition needs Member States to cooperate with one another if it is to be successful. European energy policy is particularly effective when all nations pull togeth
This is the challenge: The German-Turkish Energy Partnership was launched in 2011 with the aim of boosting bilateral cooperation in energy matters and anchoring it formally in an annual Energy Forum w
Industry standard for biogas The challenge was as follows: The use of biomethane is subsidised by the government in a number of different ways, such as via the Renewable Energy Sources Act (EEG) for e
New energy for the world The challenge was as follows: The chances of becoming internationally successful in the areas of renewable energy and energy efficiency are great. dena helps German companies
This is the challenge Reaching carbon neutrality by 2060 is an ambitious goal by the world’s largest economy. Energy supply in China still mainly relies on coal, with wind and solar accounting for onl