The EU on Thursday approved German government support for a massive investment of nearly 30 billion euros in new offshore wind farms, a key project as the country phases out nuclear energy. Germany decided to close down its nuclear power plants after the 2011 Fukushima disaster in Japan and focus on renewables to generate 40 to 45 percent of its electricity needs.
The European Commission said German plans to support the building of 17 offshore wind farms in the North Sea and three in the Baltic Sea did not violate state aid rules, adding that they would also support the EU's own energy and environmental targets. Berlin has said it will give operators a premium on top of the market price for electricity given the scale of the investment required, estimated at 29.3 billion euros.
The wind farms will have a combined maximum capacity of seven gigawatts and account for about 13 percent of Germany's electricity requirements by 2020, said the Commission, the European Union's executive arm which policies state aid policy.
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