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The German government was on Monday expected to put plans to mandate stricter building insulation standards on indefinite hold.
News of the expected move comes ahead of Monday’s crucial meeting of building industry and government leaders with Chancellor Olaf Scholz in the face of a depressed construction and housing industry.
What we know so far
The government is understood to have agreed a set of measures to bolster residential construction. These include a waiver of the EH-40 energy-saving standard, according to a 14-point paper seen by various news agencies.
EH-40 — which means a requirement of 40% of the energy of a comparable new building — was agreed by the coalition for 2025.
“In view of the current difficult conditions in the construction and housing industry due to high interest rates and construction costs, the anchoring of EH-40 as a mandatory legal standard for new buildings is no longer necessary in this legislative period and will be suspended,” various reports cited the paper as saying.
“High interest rates and inflation are a heavy burden for the construction industry,” the Reuters news agency quoted German Economy Minister Robert Habeck as saying on Monday. The minister noted that insulation measures, which the building industry says would dampen an already depressed market, “can wait.”
“I don’t see this new standard being introduced in this legislative period,” Habeck was reported as saying.
An ailing industry
The plan had drawn harsh criticism from the construction industry for months because of a steep rise in construction costs.
In the phase of low interest rates, ever higher standards for housing had been developed at the federal, state and local levels, Construction Minister, Klara Geywitz (SPD), told public broadcaster ARD.
“Now all three levels of government have to understand: We have to lower the standards and bring down the costs.”
German residential property prices are facing a serious downturn, with prices having fallen by their steepest decline this year since records began in 2000, data from the Federal Statistics Office shows.
The data also shows that building permits for apartments in Europe’s largest economy fell 31.5% in July compared to the same month a year earlier, as construction prices rose by almost 9% on the year.
dvv/rc (Reuters, AFP, dpa)
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