FAQ
When, where and what is this action about?
What is Ende Gelände?
What is the goal for this action?
The goal of the Ende Gelände’s 2026 campaign is to prevent the construction of new gas-fired power plants in Germany. The federal government is currently planning to build new gas-fired power plants with a total capacity of 12 gigawatts. That amounts to about 20 new gas-fired power plants. Economy Minister Katherina Reiche, in particular, wants to build even more power plants. Last year, Chancellor Merz announced plans for 50 new power plants.
We want to stop all power plants from being built. Another goal of this campaign is to expose the gas industry’s lobbying lies. So far, the federal government has uncritically accepted the industry’s narratives and positions, turning a blind eye to just how harmful to the climate, expensive, violent, and unsafe fossil gas is. We want to change that and work together to phase out gas.
Why is this action against gas? 6 reasons.
Too long; didn’t read
We do not view gas as merely a technical issue of energy supply, but as an instrument of power. The construction of gas-fired power plants reinforces domination and exploitation, deepens social injustices and fuels wars and new colonial supply chains. We want to break this cycle of violence and exploitation. That is why we say: No more expansion of gas!
1 – Gas is a climate killer
2 – Gas ist expensive for private households
Tenants are also at the mercy of their landlords’ decisions. For landlords, installing gas heating is currently cheaper, but it is the tenants who end up paying the high heating costs. That is why the Tenant’s association has long been calling on the government to provide more support for the transition from gas to renewable heating technologies, thereby easing the burden on tenants. German Tenants’ Association
Renewable energies are therefore the most cost-effective option in every respect. However, in order for us to truly benefit from them, the right infrastructure must be put in place through policy measures (Forschung und Wissen).
3 – Gas Makes Us Dependent on Fascists
4 – Gas is connected to imperial and colonial violence
Gas extraction is usually dirty, destructive, and harmful to health. No one wants a gas well in their backyard. That’s because it contaminates water and air and can trigger earthquakes. We stand with communities opposing local natural gas drilling, as demonstrated by our campaign in Reichling, Bavaria.
But because extraction is so harmful, these dirty fossil fuels are primarily extracted in places where people are most oppressed—in autocracies with a colonial legacy. Ultimately, it is regions in Iran, Iraq, Russia, Argentina, or in Black neighborhoods in the U.S. where gas companies poison the air, displace people, murder them, or make them sick through pollution. Those who resist must expect violence and death. Wars are also often fought over fossil fuels. When the German government promotes the use of gas, it is also promoting this colonial and authoritarian oppression.
5 – Gas serves the interest of a billion-dollar lobby
With all the trouble gas causes, you sometimes find yourself scratching your head and wondering: WHY on earth is the government doing this?
But with Katherina Reiche, a gas lobbyist has now risen to the top of the Ministry of Economic Affairs and is cheerfully continuing down this path. Shortly before taking this position, she worked in the executive suite at the fossil fuel company E.ON, and she is now simply parroting the demands of E.ON and RWE (Table.Media).
6 – Gas means profits for fossil fuel companies, the defense industry, and Big Tech
The Ruhr region is home not only to the headquarters of several energy companies, but also to key sites in the defense industry. Added to this are new sectors such as data centers, which consume staggering amounts of energy to train AI models. To meet this demand, additional gas-fired power plants are already being built at other locations (FR, Handelsblatt).