Table.Briefings

Feature

Glasgow deal: announced, negotiated, watered down

The World Climate Conference in Glasgow ended with a last-minute watering down of the global coal phase-out in the final declaration. EU politicians and NGOs are disappointed, but also highlight numerous successes of COP26. Above all, the agreement on Article 6 is likely to be groundbreaking for the future, even if some questions remain unanswered.

By Lukas Knigge

Reactions to power expansion: 'Xi forces us into systems competition'

Where the People's Republic's journey in world history will lead is not decided in Beijing alone – geopolitical developments, economic competition, and disruptive fires such as pandemics weave the coordinate network of the future global balance of power. But who is at the helm in Beijing when it comes to the direction of policy in the years ahead is no longer in doubt since the 6th Plenum. How is Xi's expansion of power viewed in the West?

By Marcel Grzanna

"China does not want to close itself off"

Hardly anyone in Germany understands China's economy as well as Doris Fischer from the Julius-Maximilian-Universität of Würzburg. In China.Table, she explains why bad news in individual sectors does not immediately mean that growth will collapse. Unlike other experts, she cannot identify the country's foreclosure. The interview was conducted by Felix Lee.

By Felix Lee

State aid guidelines: The decisive phase begins

The EU Commission is beginning the internal coordination of the new climate and energy aid guidelines — Competition Commissioner Vestager seems willing to compromise. There is an internal dispute about the IPCEI instrument.

By Till Hoppe

Traffic light coalition: Greens and FDP face staffing issues

After years in the opposition, the Greens and the FDP are on the verge of taking back government benches. The fight over ministerial posts is already in full swing. However, the real problem only begins in the ranks after that: Both parties are short of staff — which is why they now have to come up with new strategies.

By Falk Steiner

Jochen Flasbarth DEU, Deutschland, Germany, Berlin, 06.07.2021 Jochen Flasbarth, Staatssekretaer BMU, waehrend der Bundespressekonferenz zum Thema Uber Klimaneutralitaet hinausdenken Uebergabe des WBGU-Politikpapier zum Klimaschutz an die Bundesregierung in Berlin. en: Portrait Jochen Flasbarth, BMU, in Berlin, Germany *** Jochen Flasbarth DEU, Deutschland, Germany, Berlin, 06 07 2021 Jochen Flasbarth, State Secretary BMU, during the Federal Press Conference on the topic Thinking beyond climate neutrality Handover of the WBGU policy paper on climate protection to the Federal Government in Berlin en Portrait Jochen Flasbarth, BMU, in Berlin, Germany

Interview with Jochen Flasbarth: 'The general situation has changed'

The final spurt at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow has past and key issues are still unresolved. Germany's chief negotiator Jochen Flasbarth is nevertheless optimistic. In an interview with Lukas Scheid and Timo Landenberger, the BMU State Secretary welcomes China's new climate protection ambitions and calls for a date for the global coal phase-out.

By Lukas Knigge

Evergrande buys itself time

Many financial experts had already declared the ailing real estate group bankrupt months ago. But now the company is making one interest payment after the next. How much longer can Evergrande keep this up?

By Redaktion Table

Implementation instead of new goals: China at COP26

A surprise at the Glasgow climate conference: China and the US agree on joint action, sending an important signal. So far, China's track record at COP26 has been mixed. Beijing rejected several climate initiatives. Negotiator Xie Zhenhua is focusing on implementing existing plans instead of new goals.

By Christiane Kuehl