The country already gets 16% of its electricity from wind, solar and other renewable sources – three times' higher than the level it had achieved 15 years ago.
"A complete conversion to renewable energy by 2050 is possible from a technical and ecological point of view," said Jochen Flasbarth, president of the Federal Environment Agency.
"It's a very realistic target based on technology that already exists – it's not a pie-in-the-sky prediction," he said.
Thanks to its Renewable Energy Act,
The government has set goals for cutting greenhouse gas
emissions by 40% between 1990 and 2020, and by 80-85% by 2050. That goal could
be achieved if
About 40% of
Flasbarth said the Environment Agency's study found that switching to green electricity by 2050 would have economic advantages, especially for the vital export-oriented manufacturing industry. It would also create tens of thousands of jobs.
"The costs of a complete switch to renewables are a lot less than the costs to future generations that climate change will cause," he said.
Last month a report by the
guardian.co.uk