The successful implementation of Germany’s energy transition requires a faster buildout of renewables and “controllable” electricity generation capacity, digitalised grid infrastructure, energy storage, the ramp-up of the hydrogen economy, a consistent heating policy and clear investment conditions, energy industry association BDEW said.The 2026 Energy Transition Monitoring Report, which the lobby group published together with consultancy EY, showed growth in sales of heat pumps and electric vehicles, and progress in the expansion of renewables in the previous year. However, it emphasised that several areas continue to require faster progress to get on track. “The still tentative take-up of the hydrogen economy, the complex hurdles facing the heating transition and the substantial investment required for grid infrastructure highlight the challenges involved in implementing the energy transition,” BDEW said. “Furthermore, the transport transition continues to lag far behind climate policy ambitions.”The report analysed the energy transition across the economy, focussing on the energy system as a whole, renewable electricity expansion, renewables-based and low-emission gases, grids, the heating transition, and the transport sector. It found that an increasingly electricity-based energy system is becoming a main driver of competitiveness, growth and decarbonisation. A “significantly accelerated” expansion of renewables would be required to achieve energy policy objectives, but planning and permit procedures, and increasingly also land use conflicts with Germany’s military, are major bottlenecks. Recent policy decisions made by the government have led to criticism by the renewable energy industry and other stakeholders, arguing that uncertainties regarding the pace of renewables expansion and decarbonisation in heating and transport are obstructing a fast transition. The government has argued that it aims to cut energy transition costs by aligning the roll-out of renewables with grid expansion and to restore freedom of choice for households by allowing the continued use of oil and gas heating systems in the next decades. Germany has set a legally binding target to reach climate neutrality by 2045. It aims to achieve this by replacing fossil fuels with renewable energy sources, improving energy efficiency, and storing remaining emissions underground. The transformation affects every part of the economy, from electricity generation, to industry, transport, and heating.Several other report series also track the progress of Germany’s transition, including the energy transition monitoring report by the government-appointed independent expert commission and consultancy McKinsey’s Energy Transition Index.