What Germany's New Heating Law Means for Tenants and Landlords
18 Articles
18 Articles
Landlords and tenants should bear half of the cost of oil and gas each. The coalition shows new unity, climate protectionists and housing owners consider the design to be wrong – for the opposite reasons.
Successfully reforming the "heating law" from traffic lights - this is what the federal government wants to do with the building modernization law. But there is massive criticism of what it has now presented. By J. Ruppert.
Straubinger Tagblatt [Newsroom] Straubing (ots) - What sounds good and fair at first is only a doctoring of symptoms. The real challenges are thus shifted into the future. Because the now found regulation does not slow down costs, but distributes them simply differently. ... Continue reading here...Original content of: Straubinger Tagblatt, transmitted by news aktuell
At the end of February, the coalition had agreed to overturn central regulations of the heating law. Landlords will have to pay half of the fossil heating costs in the future.
Germany’s Heating Law ‘Reset’ Leaves Households Facing Higher Bills
Germany’s government has struck a deal on its controversial heating law—but for millions of households, the reality may feel all too familiar: higher costs and fewer real choices. After months of wrangling, the CDU/CSU–SPD coalition on Wednesday unveiled what it presented as a reset of the policy first pushed through under former economy minister Robert Habeck. Voters were promised a rollback. Instead, the system remains largely intact—just with…
Union and SPD want to relieve tenants of heating costs in the future. Landlords should participate if they continue to rely on fossil heating. The echo on the coalition compromise is divided.
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