Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The winter of our disconnect: Green energy policies leave Europe out in the cold
The winter of our disconnect: Green energy policies leave Europe out in the cold
Aug 17, 2025 1:00 PM

“Human beings are called to be fruitful, to bring forth good things from the earth, to join with God in making provision for our temporal well being,” according toThe Cornwall Declaration On Environmental Stewardship,of whichActon Institute co-founder Fr. Robert Sirico was an original signer. “Our call to fruitfulness, therefore, is not contrary to but plementary with our call to steward God’s gifts.” This article about transatlantic policies thatput human well-being into opposition with environmental stewardship, whichappeared in MEP Daniel Hannan’s publication The Conservativein February, and is offered in that spirit.– Ed.

Hot air rises; so do home heating bills. The UK is set to begin one of thecoldest weeks of winter, with temperatures reaching as low as -7. Yet across the EU, government policies designed to discourage the use of fossil fuels mean that a growing number of peoplecannot afford to pay their skyrocketing energy bills.

Consequently, environmentalist ideology is leaving more and more of the West out in the cold. According to Eurostat,8.7 percentof Europeans cannot afford to heat their homes. One million families in the UK already fall into that category; some are as much as €10,000 short of paying their bill.

This is a far cry from the Elysian future of cheap, abundant renewable energy promised by the environmentalist Left. Green MPs in Germany insisted the nation’s policy of transitioning to alternative energy, theEnergiewende, would cost the equivalent of one scoop of ice cream a month. Instead, bills skyrocketed by €1trillion ($1.13 trillion U.S.).

“German chancellor Angela Merkel knew that the cost of renewables would be ruinous, but political advantage trumped rationality,” wrote Rupert Darwall in his new book,Green Tyranny. “To squeeze the [Social Democratic Party] between the Greens to their left and her own Christian Democrats to their right, in 2007 she pushed the European Union to adopt a mandatory renewables target.” As a result, Darwall continues, “Germans [paid] three-and-a-half times what Americans did for their electricity.” German energy costs doubled between 2000 and 2013, and two-thirds of that increase was due to government taxes and fees,accordingtoDer Speigel.

The policy redistributes wealth from (shivering) consumers to renewable energy providers – €189 billion since 2000 – with subsidies amounting to an estimatedone-thirdof the average customer’s bill.

Despite being flush with revenue, alternative energy has not only failed to flourish but threatens the capacity of the grid itself. Germans nearly suffered the fate of second-world countries, a massive power outage, as a dark and windless January 24th strained the nation’s power reserves almost to the breaking point. “The renewables could not even provide five percent of” demand,saidMichael Vassiliadis of IG Bergbau Chemie Energie. “Coal, gas and nuclear power were virtually alone in keeping the country in power.”

These power shortages lead, in turn, to yet higher costs. One pany alone spent nearly €1billion to stabilize the energy infrastructure in its region of Germany last year – on top of €660 million for emergency stabilizations in 2016 and €710 million in 2015.

“The reason for the increase,” according to Switzerland’sBasler Zeitung, “is the increasing number of solar and wind turbines in Germany.”

Meanwhile, a much different scenario is taking place in the United States: production is rising, prices are declining, and families are reaping the benefits. American crude oil production will rise to 10.04 million barrels per day this quarter, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA),tying the all-time recordin November 1970. Natural gas production is alsoforecastto break U.S. records this year.

Of course, that means petrol prices would have risen even more without the record-breaking spike in production.

This humane energy policy, along with conservative reforms like President Trump’s tax cut, has created a perfect reversal of theEnergiewende: U.S. panies are paying consumers. As of this writing,18 panieshave announced reductions to U.S. electricity bills from one end of the nation to the other – from Massachusetts to Oregon and Rhode Island to Hawaii – totaling a minimum of $820 million.

While European Greens follow an ideologically driven passion to replace fossil fuels with untested, untried, and unreliable renewable energy sources, Americans benefit from a stable energy source, lower overall prices, more disposable e, and a warmer home.

In fact, Europeans benefit from America’s energy policy, as well. For the first time since 1957, the U.S. is expected to ea net exporterof liquefied natural gas (LNG). Doing so will allow pete with Russia’s Gazprom, which plans to ship180 billion cubic metersof LNG to Europe this year, a near-record. The excess capacity has the potential to loosen Russia’s hold on some of its client states.

Ah, but what about the environment? The record of government technocrats inspires no confidence. In 2001, the UK’s Labour government raised fuel taxes and offeredincentivestonudgeBritish drivers to switch from gasoline to diesel cars. Diesel cars have lower CO2 emissions – but higher levels of nitrogen dioxide and particulates, which also harm the environment, according to climate scientists. Environmentalists who supported the previous policy now call on the government to perform an about-face and suppress diesel usage via another round of economic disincentives, orbans.

Government policy, by nature backward-looking, is ill-equipped to keep pace with breaking scientific advancements – and pay heed to its citizens’ needs at the same time. For the most part, the EU has opted for the former, exacting a steep price from families, the poor, and the elderly.

An energy policy based on human needs and market realities looks, and succeeds, much differently than one based on hide-bound Green ideology and statist paternalism.

This article originally appeared inThe Conservativeand is reprinted with permission.

X. O’Neil. This photo has been cropped. CC BY 2.0.)

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
Antonin Scalia’s Rise to Greatness
The first volume of a biography of the late Supreme Court justice has been published, opening a window into the highly influential—and polarizing—jurist’s life. It’s clear that his opinions were formed not merely in class- and courtrooms but also by the lived experiences of an Italian immigrant’s son. Read More… When Judge Antonin Scalia was confirmed to a seat on the Supreme Court of the United States on September 16, 1986, no senator voted in opposition. He was confirmed by...
John Wesley: The World Is My Parish
Part 2 of a series on the roots of evangelicalism invites us to consider the life and career of one of the evangelical movement’s great men: John Wesley, whose emphasis on personal conversion and methodical piety has influenced millions around the world. It also led to a fracture within the Church of England. Read More… Our journey through the 18th-century evangelical revival continues in pany of John Wesley (1703­–1791). Wesley was an extraordinary individual. First, he was a systematic organizer,...
Quentin Tarantino and the Freedom of ’70s Cinema
One of the most celebrated of contemporary filmmakers has a new book out in which he shares how he has spent his career trying to recapture the exuberance, excitement, and exhilarating freedom of a special period in film history. Read More… Hollywood has largely run out of artists and doesn’t seem able or perhaps even interested in producing movies that can hold a candle to the great achievements of its 100-year history. America still dominates cinema, but it has debased...
A Catholic College Guts Its Curriculum
Marymount is not alone in this. Colleges across the country are making hard decisions about what to keep and what to drop to stay afloat. But providing an education grounded in the search for truth, one that inspires the heart as well as the mind and that holds out hope of something more than a paycheck, should be part of that process. Read More… Some years ago, only tangentially related to the reading we were doing in our seminar class,...
C.S. Lewis on the Specter of Totalitarianism
The great Christian apologist’s “scientocracy” is upon us. What should be our response? Read More… It is safe to say C.S. Lewis is not known first of all for his treatment of totalitarianism. We are familiar with Lewis the Christian apologist, Lewis the writer of children’s stories and science fiction fantasy, Lewis the literary critic and Oxford don, and then chair of medieval and renaissance literature at Cambridge. We’re less familiar with Lewis the political thinker. But in the almost...
Fear and the Feeble Foundations of Ideology
Whether in the spiritual or the political realm, lies, fear, and a lust for power threaten human dignity and flourishing. But the light of truth shines in the darkness still. Read More… I recently read the monumental essay “The Power of the Powerless” (1978) by Soviet dissident Václav Havel and immediately began to draw parallels between how he describes socialist oppression and what I understand of diabolical oppression. As a veteran Marine Corps infantry officer and 20-year catechist in the...
Conservative Compassion Fatigue
The 1990s saw several Republican-initiated welfare-reform proposals gain little traction. But some progress was being made on the local level, where most people still saw hope for real, personal change. Read More… Part 3 of my series on poverty and the welfare state ended with a brief look at munity associations in South Dallas. As the Washington welfare-reform impasse in 1995 and 1996 dragged on, I traveled the country learning and speechifying. I learned much from Deborah Darden and her...
The Myth of American Inequality
A new book challenges false narratives and skewed statistics that make the e prospects of Americans appear worse than they are. We must get our facts straight before we can implement better policies and eliminate a key obstacle to real progress: government-sanctioned disincentives to work. Read More… The notion of rising e inequality has permeated modern American discourse and is assumed as inherent to our economic system such that any claim to the contrary is easily dismissed as ignorance or...
The Return of Stoicism in an Age of Chaos
This ancient “philosophy” is cool again. In a world of constant change, ignoring what doesn’t ultimately matter makes a lot of sense. But it can only take a striving soul so far. Read More… Despite its popularity, or perhaps because of it, Stoicism is a difficult thing to define. Is it a philosophy, a nuanced outlook, a mindset, a healthy lifestyle, or a conservative fad? Is it inherently masculine? Is it toxic? Is it all these things? It’s also not...
U.S. Lawmakers Push to Cut Ties with Hong Kong over CCP Influence
“There is no longer a meaningful distinction between the PRC and Hong Kong.” Read More… 75-year-old Jimmy Lai is a firsthand witness to the Chinese Communist Party’s dedication to punishing its political enemies. Trapped in solitary confinement, the freedom fighter and former media mogul faces the possibility of life in prison if convicted under the CCP’s National Security Law. As Lai’s case garners international attention, more and more U.S. lawmakers ing to see the jailed entrepreneur’s story as indicative of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved