PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Hermann Scheer
  • Hermann Scheer
rdfs:comment
  • thumb|Hermann Scheer (2008) Hermann Scheer (* 29. April 1944 in Wehrheim; † 14. Oktober 2010 in Berlin) war ein deutscher Politiker und Mitglied des Bundesvorstandes der SPD. 1999 wurde ihm der Alternative Nobelpreis für sein Engagement für die Solarenergie verliehen.
  • Hermann Scheer (born April 29 1944 in Wehrheim) is a Social Democrat member of the German Bundestag (Parliament), President of Eurosolar (The European Association for Renewable Energy) and General Chairman of the World Council for Renewable Energy. In 1999, Scheer was awarded the Right Livelihood Award for his "indefatigable work for the promotion of solar energy worldwide".. He was voted "Hero for the Green Century" by TIME Magazine in 2002.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
Geburtsort
STERBEORT
STERBEDATUM
  • 2010-10-14
dbkwik:sca21/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:vereins/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Name
  • Scheer, Hermann
LCCN
  • n/82/111990
VIAF
  • 29661784
KURZBESCHREIBUNG
  • deutscher Politiker
Geburtsdatum
  • 1944-04-29
PND
  • 12156049
Bild
abstract
  • thumb|Hermann Scheer (2008) Hermann Scheer (* 29. April 1944 in Wehrheim; † 14. Oktober 2010 in Berlin) war ein deutscher Politiker und Mitglied des Bundesvorstandes der SPD. 1999 wurde ihm der Alternative Nobelpreis für sein Engagement für die Solarenergie verliehen.
  • Hermann Scheer (born April 29 1944 in Wehrheim) is a Social Democrat member of the German Bundestag (Parliament), President of Eurosolar (The European Association for Renewable Energy) and General Chairman of the World Council for Renewable Energy. In 1999, Scheer was awarded the Right Livelihood Award for his "indefatigable work for the promotion of solar energy worldwide".. He was voted "Hero for the Green Century" by TIME Magazine in 2002. Scheer believes that the continuation of current patterns of energy supply and use will be environmentally damaging, with renewable energy being the only realistic alternative. Scheer has concluded that it is technically and environmentally feasible to harness enough solar radiation to achieve a total replacement of the fossil/nuclear energy system by a global renewable energy economy. The main obstacle to such a change is seen to be political, not technical or economic. In 1999 he was one of the initiators of the German feed-in tariffs that were the major source of the rise of renewable energies in Germany during the following years.