By Arne Delfs, Michael Nienaber and Kamil Kowalcze German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s ruling alliance agreed on new purchase incentives for zero-emission vehicles worth €3 billion ($3.5 billion) through 2029 as part of his government’s broader effort to support the nation’s ailing carmakers. Merz announced the measures — targeted at low- and middle-income households — earlier today after talks with his Social Democrat partners in Berlin. The conservative leader is hosting top auto executives and labor officials today to discuss the future of the industry, a key sector of Europe’s biggest economy that is struggling with increasing competition from China and uncertainty around US trade tariffs. “We agree that we want to do everything we can in the coalition under the responsibility of the federal government to ensure a bright future for the German automotive industry,” Merz said. A Mercedes-Benz AG Electric G Class vehicle Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg The coalition, which took office in May, had been expected to unite behind Merz’s push for the European Union to water down its 2035 ban on new combustion-engine vehicles. The chancellor said there will be further discussions with carmakers on the ban and hopefully an agreement on a joint coalition stance. Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. Layoffs hit Generate Capital | By Mark Chediak and Coco Liu Generate Capital PBC, an investment firm that has raised more than $14 billion since 2014 to bankroll largely US-based sustainable projects, has cut staff as the withdrawal of US policy support upends the clean energy investing landscape. The majority of job cuts were in administrative and corporate operation positions, said Tina Wadhwa, a spokeswoman for San Francisco-based Generate. Dozens of people were impacted, according to a person familiar with the matter. The company declined to comment on the number of layoffs and said it currently employs 200. Last month, Generate brought in David Crane, an industry veteran who served at the Energy Department under former President Joe Biden, to replace co-founder and former CEO Scott Jacobs. In a Sept. 25 post on the firm’s site, Crane said that Generate “made mistakes rooted in the euphoria of the early 2020s” — a period when federal incentives and low interest rates led a boom in clean energy financing. Deviating from the company’s “operational roots” led to “poor performance in one component of our investment portfolio,” Crane wrote. Solar panels in San Francisco, California. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg US clean energy investors have been trying to find stable footing following a flurry of policy moves by President Donald Trump’s administration. Those include the withdrawal of billions of dollars handed out during the Biden administration, phasing out of clean energy credits, and halting and delaying permits for renewable energy projects. Investments in renewable energy fell by $20.5 billion in the US for the first half of the year, according to BloombergNEF. That’s a 36% dip compared to the second half of 2024. Roughly $22 billion in clean energy projects and factories were canceled in the first half of the year as well, according to a report from the nonpartisan group E2. Read the full story on Bloomberg.com and subscribe to Green Daily for more exclusive content on clean technology companies. Greg Jackson Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg The UK used to be a shining example of how to act on climate change. It created one of the world’s first climate laws in 2008, which bound the government to reduce emissions on tight deadlines. That law used to have cross-party support, but that’s no longer the case with politicians trying to make climate a wedge issue. Greg Jackson, chief executive officer of the UK’s largest energy retailer, Octopus Energy, joins Akshat Rathi on the Zero podcast to discuss his plan to bring down bills and keep the public on the green side. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple, Spotify or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday. Americans just lost federal tax credits for buying an electric vehicle, but charging one has grown more convenient in recent months with about 780 public high-speed charging stations opened in the US in the third quarter. Microsoft Corp. warned that it is competing for limited supplies of clean electricity in parts of East Asia, even as its window to achieve a key 2030 climate target narrows. The US and Finland will sign a deal to kickstart the expansion of the American icebreaker fleet due to the rising geopolitical importance of the Arctic. A battery-electric e-Truck on the production line in Munich, Germany Photographer: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg BloombergNEF’s annual Pioneers awards are open to startups working on transformational technologies to cut emissions. This year’s categories include building more sustainable data centers; flattening the duck curve; and developing low-carbon solutions for shipping and heavy-duty transport. There’s also a wildcard category for startups that don’t fit neatly into those three boxes. Work at a startup or know someone who does? Submissions of interest are due by October 17. Read our coverage of this year’s Pioneers winners for inspiration. |