{"id":16673,"date":"2023-03-26T17:13:33","date_gmt":"2023-03-26T15:13:33","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/hiu-batteries.de\/?post_type=research&p=16673"},"modified":"2023-10-18T09:09:54","modified_gmt":"2023-10-18T07:09:54","slug":"prof-stefan-krauter-low-electricity-bills-due-to-nuclear-power","status":"publish","type":"research","link":"https:\/\/hiu-batteries.de\/en\/research\/prof-stefan-krauter-low-electricity-bills-due-to-nuclear-power\/","title":{"rendered":"Prof. Stefan Krauter – Low electricity bills due to nuclear power?"},"content":{"rendered":"

March 26th, 2023<\/p>\n

The days of German nuclear power are numbered. The last three nuclear power plants are scheduled to go offline in mid-April 2023. The German nuclear phase-out, which was first initiated under the red-green federal government at the beginning of the millennium, should finally be completed. But now a last resistance to opinion is rearing its head: Even the daily topics (source: Kerstin Palzer, Das Erste, March 7th, 2023) spoke out in a comment against the final phase-out of nuclear energy. Reason: The higher electricity costs, which would allegedly result from the shutdown of the last nuclear reactors, intensified the ubiquitous energy crisis.<\/p>\n