Poland and Germany have increased their energy cooperation in order to build mutual trust

Poland and Germany have reached an agreement to deepen their collaboration on energy policy by working together on initiatives including energy efficiency, renewable energy, infrastructure, and the structure of the energy market. The energy agencies of the two countries, Germany’s dena and Poland’s KAPE, issued a joint statement in which they stated that the energy transition cannot be successful without the assistance of European nations. According to Kristina Haverkamp of dena, Europe’s energy transformation “is a massive task” that demands a significant “rethinking” in many different domains. She stated that an increased involvement of local residents in energy transition initiatives will be a primary emphasis of the cooperation that had been agreed upon.

According to Sebastian Bodentza, the head of KAPE, the most important aspect of the energy transition will be “the implementation of complicated tasks.” In order to accomplish this, a tight collaboration that is founded on mutual trust is required. “The relationship of Poland’s and Germany’s energy agency provides for a better awareness of each other’s difficulties, as well as the ability to respond in a manner that is both quicker and more focused,” he added. By the year 2021, the two nations had already reached an agreement to build a combined energy platform. In addition, both governments are working on a plan for a “cross-border energy zone” that would include western Poland and eastern Germany, and they are getting ready to conduct a joint energy transition summit in Warsaw at the beginning of the following year.

Despite the fact that Germany and Poland already engage in significant energy trade and collaborate on the energy transition at many levels, ranging from small local initiatives to the larger EU framework, disagreements over energy policy have frequently arisen between the governments in Warsaw and Berlin. Poland has been one of the staunchest opponents of the contentious Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, which was a project launched after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine’s Crimea Peninsula in 2014. Poland has been among the most vocal critics of Germany’s former intensive energy trading partnership with Russia, and it was also one of the most vocal critics of Germany’s former intensive energy trading partnership with China. On the other side, the government of Germany has taken exception to Poland’s plans to increase coal mining in the border region and Poland’s reluctance to commit to goals for the phase-out of coal-powered electricity production.

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