• federalreverse-old@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    There are compounding issues too:

    • Most cities, even more pronounced in Western Germany, have lackluster district heating networks — meaning green district heating concepts like in Denmark wouldn’t work nearly as well.
    • There was a huge privatization wave in the 90s. Residential buildings in many cases now need to make a profit every year. High-capex measures that bring mediocre/hard-to-forecast opex improvements (entirely dependent on the price of fossil gas vs. electricity) like heat pumps are not going to win you fans among profit-driven investors.
    • cwagner@lemmy.cwagner.me
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      1 year ago

      Most cities, even more pronounced in Western Germany, have lackluster district heating networks

      Lackluster? I’m pretty sure our historic city center has no such network at all ;) The dorm I used to live in had stone-walls from somewhere between 1100 and 1300 in the party cellar :D