Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How Green economics left the West out in the cold
How Green economics left the West out in the cold
Mar 28, 2026 1:26 PM

As they shiver through the season, this frosty winter reminds Americans and Europeans how much they have mon. However, more and more Europeans find themselves out in the cold thanks to environmentalist policies that have caused too many to be unable to afford adequate home heatingthis winter.

Environmentalist policies have undermined the stability of the energy supply itself.A Swiss newspaper, the Basler Zeitung(literally the “Basel newspaper”) reports that one German pany alone “spent almost a billion euros last year on emergency interventions to stabilize the grid. …The costs were thus about half higher than in 2016 (660 million euros) and around forty percent higher than in 2015 (710 million).”

“The reason for the increase,” the paper states, “is the increasing number of solar and wind turbines in Germany.” Both sources are “irregular and often unpredictable,” and the “problems with grid stability could increase significantly with the shutdown of the remaining nuclear power plants.”

Leaving aside the instability, the real cost is paid by German families. “The burden for a family of four is therefore about 25,000 euros, which is more than half of the average gross annual gross earnings,” the paper notes.

Rupert Darwall explores the genesis of these policies in his new book Green Tyranny.Wolfgang Müller, general secretary oftheEuropean Institute for Climate and Energyand a free-market think tank leader in Germany,reviews the book forActon’sReligion & Liberty Transatlanticwebsite.

Darwall writes, “It took only three years for Germany’s Energiewende[Green energy policy] to increase the number of households trapped in fuel poverty by one-fourth.” This trend held true in the UK, as well:

After conducting a market investigation, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) confirmed that the main driver of domestic electricity price increases was not profiteering by panies but the cost of government-imposed obligations and network costs, the latter largelyreflecting the costs of integrating wind and solar capacity. Gas and electricity take up nearly ten percent of the household spending of the poorest ten percent of the population and is their largest item of expenditure after housing.

While squeezing consumers, their employers also felt the pinch.Deutsche Bank concluded in January 2014 that German energy policy had chipped away at its industrial base. “German industrial users paid 26 percent more for pared to the EU average, while the disparity with the United States was even more pronounced,” Darwall writes.

Müller writes that Darwall connects the dots abut how Green policies went from a fringe movement to the dominant social philosophy in much of Europe.

Darwall presents a wealth of details to explain how a powerful Green/Left network managed to occupy key political positions in Europe and the U.S. and to establish (or gain control of) institutions that give them unquestioned authority over the subject. … He also explains how the onslaught on freedom happens openly (if unnoticed by the media and general public) by highlighting a crisis of global proportions – such as man-made climate change – which requires solutions that “normal democracies” aren’t able to provide. They must be settled by a council of experts, which acts outside the democratic process.

Their belief that only peer-approved experts can understand proper policy would result in a global technocracy, or a supranational managerial state. Ultimately Müller, one of Europe’s leading skeptics of Green orthodoxy, says that Darwall substantiates his provocative subtitle (“exposing the totalitarian roots of the plex”).

Read Müller’s review, and you’ll understand why he concludes, “Green Tyranny is a must-read for every person who cherishes freedom and who wants to know how environmentalism could e so powerful that, in some countries, it seems like a new state religion.”

Read his full review here.

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Catholic Health Care Rifts
As rumors of congressional action on health-care reform continue to swirl (it will happen Sunday, maybe?), fissures in the American munity are ing increasingly evident. The rift is highlighted in the current, in some ways unprecedented, public dispute between two important Catholic voices. By size and clout, the principal health-related organization of a Catholic identity is the Catholic Health Association. The official organ of the American Catholic bishops as a collective is the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. Although...
What do you mean by ‘social justice’?
On NRO, John Leo points out how Glenn Beck missed the mark in his recent criticism of “social justice” churches (the reductio ad Hitlerum fallacy, again). But Beck is on to something, Leo says: When Glenn Beck urged Christians to leave churches that preach social justice, he allowed himself to be tripped up by conventional buzzwords of the campus Left. In plain English, “social justice” is a goal of all churches and refers to helping the poor and seeking equality....
Read My Lips
“…we are setting an ambitious goal: all students should graduate from high school prepared for college and a career – no matter who you are or where e from.” – Barack Obama, Saturday Radio Address. A few years ago I asked a friend and business owner why he put value on a college diploma when talking with entry level talent who had majored in subjects incredibly tangential to his job descriptions. He answered, “Well, it shows they can finish something.”...
Caring for the Persecuted Church
Power Line has a post over at its site titled “Why Don’t Christians Care?” Glenn Reynolds at Instapundit also linked to the post today. Powerline’s question refers to the lack of concern from the “mainstream” munity on Christians being massacred by Muslims in the Middle East and Africa. It’s a great question to ask. Just for the record, we want to remind people that the Acton Institute cares. Last month I wrote a piece that received a lot of attention...
The Scars of Ceausescu
It is a good thing from time to time to step back and remember just what it is that we who believe in the free society fight for each day. I stumbled across Michael Totten’s exploration of Romania – Twenty Years After the Fall of the Tyrant. With the passage of time, it is easy to forget – at least for those of us who never directly experienced it – just how suffocating and cruel the Communist dictatorships of the...
Video: Liberating Black Theology
Joseph D. Martinez, a 2008 alum of Acton’s Toward a Free and Virtuous Society program, produced a great video to introduce readers to my new book, Liberating Black Theology (now in the Acton Book Shoppe. Buy it here). Thanks, Joe! “Liberating Black Theology” book promo from Joseph D. Martinez on Vimeo. ...
Saving Catholic Schools
In many urban areas, maintaining Catholic schools and maintaining some semblance of educational choice are synonymous: the old Catholic schools represent the only alternatives to a big, clumsy, and often unsatisfactory public school district. The issue is especially poignant because the student populations served by these schools are frequently the most educationally challenging populations in the nation. Thus, proponents of school choice are dismayed at the continued shuttering of dozens of major-city Catholic schools across the country. The search for...
Melanchthon on the Gospel’s Social Implications
The hugely influential reformer Philip Melanchthon (1497-1560) writes in mentary on Romans 13: Meanwhile, the Gospel teaches the godly properly about spiritual and eternal life in order that eternal life may be begun in their hearts. In public it wants our bodies to be engaged in this civil society and to make sure of mon bonds of this society with decisions about properties, contracts, laws, judgments, magistrates, and other things. These external matters do not hinder the knowledge of God...
NIV Stewardship Study Bible: ‘A remarkable resource…’
Rev. Jerry Hoffman, Director of the Center for Stewardship Leaders at Luther Seminary, reviews the NIV Stewardship Study Bible. “What I found was a remarkable resource that leads one to see how strong the stewardship thread exists throughout scripture…. I anticipate using this resource in my writing, preaching and teaching,” he says. To keep abreast of the different resources available on stewardship, e of a fan of the NIV Stewardship Study Bible on Facebook and follow the Twitter feed @Oikonomeo,...
What Griffiths Said
In this week’s Acton Commentary I expand on a minor meme floating around the web towards the end of last year that criticized the purported claim made by Lord Brian Griffiths, a Goldman Sachs advisor and vice chairman: “The injunction of Jesus to love others as ourselves is an endorsement of self-interest.” I do a couple of things in this piece. First, I show that Griffith’s claim was rather different than that reported by various news outlets. Second, I place...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved