Early nuclear research in Germany Prior to the takeover of
Nazi Germany, German universities were the employers of some of the world's most renowned nuclear physicists, including
Albert Einstein,
Otto Hahn,
Lise Meitner,
Leo Szilard, and others. In 1938, Hahn and his colleague
Fritz Straßmann conducted an experiment designed by Lise Meitner (who had already been driven into exile due to her Jewish ancestry), which led to the
discovery of nuclear fission. Soon thereafter, a "race" began between the soon-to-be belligerents of World War II to find military or civilian applications of the new technology. Hampered by infighting, lack of resources, mistakes, and the suspicion of Nazi authorities against "
Jewish physics", the
Uranverein ("uranium club") led by
Werner Heisenberg never got close to building a
Uranmaschine ("uranium machine"—what the Americans called a "
pile") that achieved criticality, let alone building a nuclear weapon. When the Americans took over the last German attempt at a research reactor during the war at
Haigerloch in southwestern Germany, it was clear to the people involved in the
Alsos Mission that Germany had fallen behind the
Manhattan Project to a considerable degree.
First nuclear power plants As in many
industrialised countries, nuclear power in Germany was first developed in the late 1950s. Only a few experimental reactors went online before 1960, and
an experimental nuclear power station in
Kahl am Main opened in 1960. All of the German nuclear power plants that opened between 1960 and 1970 had, as in the rest of the world at that time, a power output of less than 1,000 MW and have now all closed down. The first almost fully commercial nuclear power plant started operating in 1969;
Obrigheim operated until 2005, when it was shut down by a phaseout decision of the government. The first stations with a power output of more than 1000 MW each were the two units of the
Biblis Nuclear Power Plant in 1974 and 1976. In the early 1960s, there was a proposal to build a nuclear power station in West
Berlin, but the project was dropped in 1962. Another attempt to site a reactor in a major city was made in 1967, when
BASF planned to build a nuclear power station on its grounds at Ludwigshafen to supply process steam. The project was withdrawn by BASF.
Attempts at developing a closed fuel-cycle and breeding reactors A closed nuclear fuel cycle was planned, starting with mining operations in the
Saarland and the
Schwarzwald; uranium ore concentration, fuel rod filling production in
Hanau; and reprocessing of the spent fuel in the never-built
nuclear fuel reprocessing plant at
Wackersdorf. The
radioactive waste was intended to be stored in a
deep geological repository as part of the
Gorleben long-term storage project. Today, there is a "ergebnisoffener" searching process over the whole country for the storage of the irradiated nuclear fuel. In 1959, 15 municipal electric companies established the
Association of Experimental Reactor GmbH (
Arbeitsgemeinschaft
Versuchs
reaktor, AVR) to demonstrate the feasibility and viability of a gas-cooled, graphite-moderated high temperature reactor (
HTGR). In the early 1960s, it started the design and construction of
AVR at the
Jülich Research Centre. The first criticality was attained in 1966, and the AVR was in operation for more than 22 years. Despite the fact that fuel feed and discharge system showed excellent availability, the AVR was shut down for political reasons in 1988. The AVR was designed to breed
uranium-233 from
thorium-232. Thorium-232 is over 100 times as abundant in the Earth's
crust as
uranium-235. In 1965, before the AVR started operation, a basic design for a commercial demonstration HTGR reactor using thorium was started, the
THTR-300. The HTGR, rated at 300 MWe, synchronised with the grid in 1985. Six months later, a fuel pebble became lodged in the reactor core. After repairs, it was restarted and operated in July 1986, reaching full power in September 1986. It operated until September 1988 and was shut down in September 1989.
Early opposition and reactor closures In the early 1970s, large public demonstrations prevented the construction of a
nuclear plant at
Wyhl. The Wyhl protests were an example of a local community challenging the nuclear industry through a strategy of direct action and civil disobedience. The police were accused of using unnecessarily violent means.
Anti-nuclear success at Wyhl inspired nuclear opposition throughout
Germany and elsewhere. The
Rheinsberg Nuclear Power Plant was the first (mostly experimental) nuclear power plant in
East Germany. It was of low power and operated from 1966 until 1990. The second to be commissioned, the
Greifswald Nuclear Power Plant, was planned to house eight of the Russian 440 MW
VVER-440 reactors. The first four went online between 1973 and 1979. Greifswald 5 operated for less than a month before it was closed; the other three were cancelled during different stages of their build-up. In 1990, during the
German reunification, all eastern German nuclear power plants were closed due to flaws in safety standards. The
Stendal Nuclear Power Plant in East Germany was to be the largest nuclear power station in Germany. After
German reunification and due to concerns about the
Soviet design, construction was stopped, and the power station was never completed. In the 1990s, the three cooling towers that had been erected were demolished, and the area is an industrial estate today. By 1992, a group of German and Swiss firms planned to proceed with the construction of the HTR-500, a design that made considerable use of the THTR-300 technology. But the politically hostile environment in the light of the
Chernobyl disaster as well as technical issues with the THTR-300 halted any effort. The technology is now being pursued by the Chinese as the
HTR-PM.
Construction ban and first phase-out schedule at
Gorleben in northern Germany on 8 November 2008. The banner reads "Only the risk is certain. Atomic power? No thanks!" During the chancellorship of
Gerhard Schröder, the
social democratic-
green government decreed Germany's
final retreat from using nuclear power by 2022. This involved a ban on the construction of new nuclear power plants. Additionally, all existing nuclear power plants were given a budget of energy generated before their shutdown would be mandated, resulting in an average projected lifespan per plant of 32 years. This resulted in first shutdowns of the
Stade Nuclear Power Plant in November 2003 and the
Obrigheim plant in 2005. The last plant to be shut down was expected to be
Neckarwestheim II in 2021.
Changes to phase-out schedule The phase-out plan was initially delayed in late 2010, when during the chancellorship of centre-right Angela Merkel, the coalition
conservative-
liberal government decreed a 12-year delay of the schedule. This delay provoked protests, including a
human chain of 50,000 from
Stuttgart to the nearby nuclear plant in Neckarwestheim.
Anti-nuclear demonstrations on 12 March attracted 100,000 people across Germany. . On 14 March 2011, in response to the renewed concern about the use of nuclear energy raised by the Fukushima incident in the German public and in light of upcoming elections in three
German states, Merkel declared a 3-month moratorium on the reactor lifespan extension passed in 2010. German engineering-industry giant
Siemens announced a complete withdrawal from the nuclear industry in 2011 as a response to the
Fukushima nuclear disaster. On 15 March, the German government announced that it would temporarily shut down 8 of its 17 reactors, i.e., all reactors that went online before 1981. Former proponents of nuclear energy, such as Angela Merkel,
Guido Westerwelle, and
Stefan Mappus, changed their positions. In the largest
anti-nuclear demonstration ever held in Germany, some 250,000 people protested on 26 March 2011, under the slogan "heed Fukushima – shut off all nuclear plants". On 30 May 2011, the German government announced a plan to shut down all nuclear reactors by 2022. Prior to the decision, Germany's renewable energy sector already provided 17% of Germany's electricity and employed about 370,000 people. The decision to phase out nuclear power has been called the swiftest change in political course since unification. Political writer
David Frum characterised Merkel's decision as a political move to improve her approval ratings, which had sagged after the post-
2008 financial crisis bailout of southern Europe by Germany. In September 2011,
Siemens, which had been responsible for constructing all 17 of Germany's existing nuclear power plants, announced that it would exit the
nuclear sector following the Fukushima disaster and the subsequent changes to German energy policy and would no longer build nuclear power plants anywhere in the world. Merkel stated that Germany "[does not] only want to renounce nuclear energy by 2022, we also want to reduce our CO2 emissions by 40 percent and double our share of renewable energies, from about 17 percent today to then 35 percent". On 5 December 2016, the
Federal Constitutional Court ('''') ruled that the nuclear plant operators affected by the accelerated phase-out of nuclear power following the Fukushima disaster are eligible for "adequate" compensation. The court found that the nuclear exit was essentially constitutional but that the utilities are entitled to damages for the "good faith" investments they made in 2010. The utilities can now sue the German government under civil law. E.ON, RWE, and Vattenfall are expected to seek a total of €19billion under separate suits. Six cases were registered with courts in Germany . As of March 2019, only seven nuclear plants had been left in operation and should be scheduled to be shut down and dismantled. As of early 2022, three plants remained for the final year.
Renewed debate After
Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, German energy policy—which had up to that point relied on Russian imports (particularly
natural gas) to a large degree—was re-evaluated, including a temporary suspension of the controversial
Nord Stream 2 pipeline. The German
minister of economy and climate,
Robert Habeck, answered in an interview that he would be "open" to extending the life of the remaining three nuclear power plants but expressed skepticism as to the feasibility of and sense of such a move. Several newspapers called for a re-opening of the debate on the nuclear phaseout, including the
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. The (former) operators of Germany's remaining three nuclear power plants as well as the three reactors that had been shut down in late 2021 (but not yet dismantled) commented that they are "open" to negotiations with the government as to extending the lifetime of those reactors or restarting those that were already shut down. On 21 August 2022, German Economy Minister
Robert Habeck said that Germany would not reverse the phase-out itself but that he was open to the idea of extending the lifespan of the
Isar Nuclear Power Plant in
Bavaria, subject to a stress test of Germany's electricity system. German public opinion was split on the issue of phasing out nuclear power. On 5 September 2022, the Federal Government announced that two of the three remaining nuclear power plants (Neckarwestheim and Isar 2) would operate beyond 31 December 2022 until April 2023 (cycle stretch out), while the
Emsland Nuclear Power Plant was to be shut down as planned. However, on 10 October 2022, Scholz announced that all three would remain operating until 15 April 2023.
Wolfgang Kubicki, deputy leader of the
Free Democrats, said in an interview with the Funke Media Group that "Germany has the safest nuclear power plants worldwide and switching them off would be 'a dramatic mistake' with painful economic and ecological consequences." Other members of the Free Democratic Party have called for the nuclear power plants to be at least maintained as a precautionary measure in case they are needed in the future for power generation. In April 2024, there was a controversy related to the decommissioning of nuclear power plants in Germany. German magazine
Cicero claimed that German Economy Minister
Robert Habeck had misled the public in 2022 and ignored the advice of experts who said nuclear facilities were still safe to operate. By early 2025 the journalists had used court orders to gain access to internal documents, which allowed them, in conjunction with the findings of an investigative committee, to reconstruct how the highest officials in Habeck's ministry, Patrick Graichen and Stefan Tidow, had suppressed experts who advocated keeping the nuclear power plants and only forwarded statements which argued against nuclear power. ==Reactors==