Experts have warned that “social peace is in great danger” in Germany as the country has turned to rationing hot water, dimming its street lights, and shutting down swimming pools amid a nationwide energy crunch.
Vonovia said the change will not impact temperatures during the daytime and access to hot water also won’t be affected.
The country has also vowed to reduce its dependence on Russian energy owing to its invasion of Ukraine.
Germany’s government responded by triggering the “alert level” of its three-level gas emergency plan aimed at safeguarding against shortages, while officials have said the situation with natural gas in the country is “tense” and warned it could worsen further.
‘The Situation Is More Than Dramatic’
As a result, gas prices in the nation have soared, and the country’s Economy Minister Robert Habeck last month warned that rationing in the future couldn’t be ruled out.Hot water will no longer be available to the roughly 600 tenants during certain times, although warm water will flow between the hours of 4 a.m. and 8 a.m., 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., and 5 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Gedaschko told German newspaper Bild: “When it comes to saving energy, both the landlord side is asked to set the heating systems to save energy, and the tenant side to behave in an energy-saving manner in the apartment.”
Turning Off Traffic Lights
Elsewhere, Helmut Dedy, head of the German Association of Towns and Cities, has suggested turning off traffic lights at night and shutting off hot water in council buildings, museums, and sports centers, according to the Financial Times.The district of Lahn-Dill, near Frankfurt, is reportedly switching off the hot water in its 86 schools and 60 gyms from mid-September in an effort to save €100,000 ($84,000) in energy costs, while Düsseldorf has temporarily closed a massive swimming pool complex called the Münster-Therme.
Berlin has followed suit, opting to turn down the thermostat on open-air swimming pools, according to the report.
Amid a potential worsening energy crisis this winter, Germany has made the “painful” decision to restart decommissioned coal power plants, Habeck has said.
Yet even with further potential rationing across the country, Russian gas cuts are severely impacting the nation, including many of its key industries.