Federal Ministry for the Environment, Climate Action, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety


[Image:Kornbru2.JPG|thumb|Headquarters in Bonn]
The Federal Ministry for the Environment, Climate Action, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety is a cabinet-level ministry of the Federal Republic of Germany. It has branches in Bonn and Berlin.
The ministry was established on 6 June 1986 in response to the Chernobyl disaster. The then Federal Government wanted to combine environmental authority under a new minister in order to face new environmental challenges more effectively. Furthermore The Greens had been formed a few years prior in part as an anti-nuclear environmentalist party and had achieved federal representation in 1983 and Joschka Fischer had been appointed minister of the environment for Hesse the previous year, marking the first state level red-green coalition in Germany. Thus the CDU/CSU intended to project a message of taking the environment seriously in an era in which the Greens were widely perceived as the only party with a policy focus on environmental issues, notwithstanding the fact that CSU-led Bavaria had had a state environment minister since 1971 and the FDP was the first to pass an environment-related plank in the party platform in 1971. Prior to the establishment of the ministry of the environment, responsibilities for environmental issues were distributed among the ministries of the Interior, Agriculture and Health.

Functions

Image:BMU Alexanderplatz Berlin.jpg|thumb|Seat in Berlin on Alexanderplatz
The ministry's primary functions include:

Organization

The ministry is led by the Minister for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety. The current Minister is Steffi Lemke, appointed by Chancellor Olaf Scholz. The minister is supported by two parliamentary state secretaries and two career state secretaries who manage the ministry's nine directorates:

Federal Environment Ministers

'''Political Party:'''