‘Green’ Europe’s Industrial Masochism

Guest essay by Dr. Samuele Furfari

If a self-described leader finds that nobody is following, is leadership present? Perhaps. The next question might be, where is the leader headed?

These queries could well be put to the European Union’s makers of energy policy, who fancy themselves as groundbreakers for a supposed transition away from fossil fuels in favor of “green” technologies. (We use qualifying quotation marks because wind turbines and solar panels have plenty of environmental downsides.)

But, according to recent Energy Institute data, European leaders are driving not a bandwagon onto which the world is jumping but rather a hearse toward self-destruction.

EU policy choices have led to so-called renewable sources – primarily wind and solar – constituting more than one-third of the European electricity mix, surpassing coal by a significant margin.

Globally, renewables are growing rapidly in absolute terms. In 2024, wind, solar and other renewables contributed 5.6% to the global energy mix.

However, the growth in renewables is not keeping pace with rising global energy demand. Over the past decade, fossil fuel consumption increased more than seven times faster than the growth of renewables. Contrary to the narrative often presented by media, coal production has increased, rising more than 10% in the last decade.

Fossil fuels – coal, oil and natural gas – accounted for 87% of the world’s energy in 2024, while renewables’ share remains in single digits despite more than $5 trillion being spent on wind and solar in the last 20 years.

Last year, global energy supply increased by nearly 2%, driven by rising demand for all types of energy. Accounting for 65% of the increase was the Asia-Pacific region, which represents 47% of the world’s energy consumption and where 83% of the coal is burned and reigns as king of fuel sources. Together, China, India and Indonesia produced 71% of the globe’s coal.

Over the last 10 years EU energy demand has decreased by almost 6 exajoules (EJ), while worldwide use has increased by 13 times – almost 77 exajoules EJ.

So, EU “leadership” has managed to decrease European energy use and increase the role of renewables on the continent. But at what cost?

“In 2008, the U.S. and Eurozone economies were about the same size,” writes Andy Kessler in the Wall Street Journal. “Since 2010, Europe’s per capita gross domestic product (GDP) has basically flatlined. Today, the U.S. nominal GDP per capita is almost twice as large as Europe’s.”

Rather than undergoing the global EnergieWende imposed by Germany, the world is growing economically and in a phase of adding new sources to existing ones rather than replacing them. (See my paper “Energy Addition, Not Transition” for a fuller discussion.)

Given that most of the world’s population aspires to greater prosperity – and therefore cheap, abundant energy as desired by the EU before its conversion to ecologism – it is highly unlikely that these trends will be reversed. Economic and social imperatives, as well as the need for secure energy supplies, make a reduction of fossil fuels demand improbable.

As a result, the gap between ill-advised climate ambitions and the reality of global energy consumption will only widen further. Failure to meet announced climate targets is now so obvious that it is reasonable to anticipate an abandonment of the Paris Agreement, as it will become increasingly difficult to conceal the scale of this failure.

Paradoxically, while the latest edition of the Energy Institute’s Statistical Review of World Energy clearly demonstrates this failure, the European Commission continues to propose utopian targets, such as a 90% reduction in its own emissions by 2040.

The reality is that European industry is withering away, jobs are moving elsewhere, and citizens are growing tired of footing the bill for a climate policy that is inevitably leading to economic suicide. Yes, the EU may achieve net zero, but it will be zero across the board: zero industry, zero prosperity and zero global influence.

So, there you have it: the EU, champion of policies that can make no difference in the climate – and of industrial masochism.

Dr. Samuele Furfari is a professor of energy geopolitics in Brussels and London, a former senior official with the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Energy and a member of the CO2 Coalition. He is author of the paper, “Energy Addition, Not Transition,” and 18 books, including “Energy Insecurity: The organised destruction of the EU’s competitiveness.”

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mleskovarsocalrrcom
August 26, 2025 10:24 am

What was once called a conspiracy theory has now become obvious. AGW is all about reversing the world economic order under the guise of saving the planet. AGW, ESG, DEI. WEF are all parts of the same Marxist plan ….. read all about it in Agenda 21.

Mr.
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
August 26, 2025 11:38 am

encore performance as Agenda 30?

strativarius
August 26, 2025 10:56 am

Quo vadis, Europa? Down the tubes.

…clean energy transition, noting its potential to generate employment, enhance energy security, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions across sectors, including construction. 

Although the directive referenced in the report does not directly regulate the housing sector, it carries profound implications for domestic energy use, affordability of heating and cooling, and the types of technologies encouraged for residential application. It advocates for regulatory frameworks that promote sustainable building practices and the widespread integration of clean energy systems, shaping the future landscape of construction and renovation in Europe.
https://build-up.ec.europa.eu/en/resources-and-tools/publications/2025-eu-clean-energy-progress-report

Directives are law.

Reply to  strativarius
August 26, 2025 12:51 pm

egulatory frameworks …….. to shape the future

one fundamental plank in the communist dogma

the party will shape the future

E. Schaffer
August 26, 2025 11:03 am

Green policies serve their purpose..

comment image

CD in Wisconsin
August 26, 2025 11:29 am

“…….while renewables’ share remains in single digits despite more than $5 trillion being spent on wind and solar in the last 20 years.”
_____________________

$5 trillion….what a mind-boggling waste of money. Think of all the better things that could have been done with that kind of money. Sigh.

Reply to  CD in Wisconsin
August 26, 2025 12:53 pm

it’s pyramid building

Izaak Walton
Reply to  CD in Wisconsin
August 26, 2025 4:49 pm

$5 trillion over 20 years across the entire global is a relatively small amount. It amounts to
about 0.2% of the global GDP. And it is hardly a complete waste of money. Roof-top solar is by far the cheapest way to generate electricity across much of the world and saves consumers money especially if they install a battery as well.

Alternatively to put the number in context, about $5 trillion is lost each year by the inefficiencies of fossil fuels. Once you take into account the energy lost in heat when burning fossil fuels to create electricity or to power a car the inefficiencies of fossil fuels are huge. So the losses per year due to the inefficiencies of fossil fuel use are the same as the amount spend in 20 years on renewable energy.

Mr.
Reply to  Izaak Walton
August 26, 2025 5:19 pm

$5 trillion here, $5 trillion there, and soon we’re talking real money, hey Izzy?

(ps – caught anything lately?)

Leon de Boer
Reply to  Izaak Walton
August 26, 2025 6:44 pm

Lovely bedtime story for the kiddies but that any of it were true 🙂

Troll on bro.

Mr.
August 26, 2025 11:36 am

There’s an established 2-step pattern with leftist political office holders –

  1. waste gazillions of taxpayers’ coin trashing their nations’ functioning energy systems, installing useless ‘renewables’ purely because ideology;
  2. bugger off to the UN or the like to bask in the adoration of other socialist ideologues already well attached to taxpayers’ teats for the rest of their meaningless lives.

Examples –
Australia’s Kevin Rudd
Australia’s Julia Gillard
New Zealand’s Jacinda Adern
Canada’s Justin Trudeau? (nah, gotta draw the line somewhere with useful idiots)
UK’s Tony Blair
UK’s Gordon Brown
USA’s ‘special climate envoy’ John Kerry
USA’s Michael Bloomberg
etc
etc

strativarius
Reply to  Mr.
August 26, 2025 12:02 pm

When they’re washed up at home… Once the UK chameleons could go to Brussels, but no more.

John Hultquist
August 26, 2025 12:01 pm

 I don’t watch TV news, listen to radio reports, nor read the major newspapers. Our small local paper carries reports reprinted from various sources but I have yet to see any relating to the issues reported by Dr. Samuele Furfari.
On such subjects Americans live in a new desert. Corrections, please, if I’m wrong.

George Thompson
Reply to  John Hultquist
August 26, 2025 12:53 pm

OK, I live in the new American desert, I guess-who and why this guy Furfari? I watch news, read news, some journals -generally a waste of time-I have never heard of him.

August 26, 2025 12:47 pm

I can’t see how Europe can both increase its military spending to 5% of GNP while simultaneously having net zero policies. So maybe Trump’s pushing them to increase military spending is helping to beat back net zero insanity.

George Thompson
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
August 26, 2025 12:55 pm

Well, staring down the wrong end of an enemy’s military ambitions will focus the mind…maybe?

Bob
August 26, 2025 4:01 pm

Europeans have no one to blame but themselves. Their leaders have been lying to them for decades. These lies have been clearly pointed out over and over. Yet here we are Europe choking itself to death. It is a sorry thing to witness.