Energy Transition Meltdown Could Mean Global Bifurcation

By Vijay Jayaraj

History will likely remember 2025 as the year energy corporatists finally stopped pretending there is a climate crisis. For a decade, a bizarre theater of the absurd played out as titans of the oil and gas industry apologized for their core business while pledging allegiance to a “green transition” that existed mostly in the imaginations of Western bureaucrats. But the curtain has seemingly fallen.

ExxonMobil, one of the world’s largest energy producers, has slashed $10 billion from its low-carbon investment commitments through 2030.  Simultaneously, the company announced that it expects $25 billion in earnings growth from 2024 to 2030 to be powered primarily by increases in oil and gas production, which will push daily output to 5.5 million barrels of oil equivalent by the end of the decade.

This is not a company abandoning climate responsibility but rather at last recognizing what has long been obvious: The path prescribed by the climate industrial complex is economically destructive and operationally impossible – even with massive government subsidies.

For years, the global energy strategy has been surreal. Companies that built the modern world on the back of energy-dense hydrocarbons indulged those celebrating the arrival of wind turbines and solar panels to power civilization. But reality, stubborn and unforgiving, has interrupted the psychedelic revelry.

ExxonMobil’s low-carbon investments will be paced to policy support and customer demand, says the company. That is corporate speak meaning that spending on green projects is paused unless the government – using our tax dollars – subsidizes the risk or until a market exists.

Megaprojects, once heralded as the future, are now in line for deferral. Why? Because without taxpayer handouts, the economics of trying to bury underground a plant food like carbon dioxide simply do not work – and defy common sense.

The energy sector is pivoting from a strategy of “grow clean at all costs” to “returns first, transition last.” “Green” projects are being relegated to a secondary capital bucket – a token for good PR instead of a core activity.

Europe’s Shell and Aker BP and Canada’s Enbridge have withdrawn from the Science Based Targets initiative to establish “science-based emissions reductions.” This was a retreat from what is described as a “credible, science-based net-zero framework” because there was neither credibility nor science. It was a political suicide pact. The energy giants looked at the cliff’s edge and refused to jump.

British multinational BP, having abandoned its promise to go “Beyond Petroleum,” has raised its oil and gas spending and softened its renewable targets.

ENEOS Holdings, a Japanese refiner, has discarded hydrogen production targets, with CEO Tomohide Miyata explaining that “the shift toward a carbon-neutral society appears to be slowing.”

These U-turns represent a renaissance in policy realism. Energy needs do not disappear because politicians make speeches at climate summits or corporations allocate funds to ESG programs or governments attempt to control consumption and choices of appliances and automobiles.

Second thoughts about an inevitably doomed “green” transition is a victory for the single mother in the U.S. trying to budget for winter heating and for the small business owner in the U.K. whose margins are crushed by one of the highest commercial electricity rates in the world. And for the billions of people in developing nations, this pivot could be salvation from generational poverty.

The question now is whether governments will recognize what corporations have made clear: that the energy transition was a fantasy infused with scientific language and draped in moralistic gingerbread. Or will they continue to increase subsidies and regulations?

Very likely, there will be a bifurcation: on the one hand, western bureaucracies, particularly in Europe, continuing an economic decline under mandates and taxes, and on the other, pragmatic governments, many of them in Asia, pursuing prosperity with fuels and technologies that work.

This commentary was first published by Daily Caller on December 25, 2025.

Vijay Jayaraj is a Science and Research Associate at the CO2 Coalition, Fairfax, Virginia. He holds an M.S. in environmental sciences from the University of East Anglia and a postgraduate degree in energy management from Robert Gordon University, both in the U.K., and a bachelor’s in engineering from Anna University, India.

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mleskovarsocalrrcom
December 27, 2025 10:50 am

They keep calling it a “transition” when in fact the world used more fossil fuels year after year. There never was any transition, only a costly and unreliable addition of energy.

D Sandberg
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
December 28, 2025 8:00 am

Correct. Not everyone understands that, and after having it explained to them, they still don’t “get it”.

Tom Halla
December 27, 2025 10:59 am

It was always Green Prayer Wheels.

Reply to  Tom Halla
December 27, 2025 11:35 am

It’s grift, all the way down.

Peter Barrett
December 27, 2025 11:43 am

Here in the UK we are about to undergo our final energy transition:
wood to coal
coal to oil
oil to gas
gas to furniture.

ResourceGuy
Reply to  Peter Barrett
December 27, 2025 12:17 pm

You left out dung.

Reply to  ResourceGuy
December 27, 2025 1:56 pm

UK will have no cattle or horses… being 100% vegan/bugs… also methane and all that ….

…. so where are they going to get dung ??

Reply to  ResourceGuy
December 27, 2025 2:40 pm

True, but the journey to the Houses of Parliament to collect it is pretty onerous…

December 27, 2025 11:44 am

But still no-one in authority at these energy companies, or anywhere else for that matter, will come out straight and say that CO2 is not dangerous and the whole climate emergency thing is a mistake.

Richard Rude
Reply to  Oldseadog
December 27, 2025 11:54 am

You ask for too much from business people.

cgh
Reply to  Oldseadog
December 27, 2025 4:25 pm

They don’t need to say anything. Their investment choices and withdrawals from previous investment patterns say all that is necessary. The inability by the anti-energy groups to blackmail energy producers means that the global warming cult loses.

Keitho
Editor
Reply to  Oldseadog
December 28, 2025 1:02 am

Far too much momentum in the Climate lie, and by momentum I mean money.

Ron
Reply to  Oldseadog
December 28, 2025 1:05 am

Trump did that!

December 27, 2025 12:03 pm

Story tip:
https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/25724439.tesla-build-huge-battery-storage-system-scotland/

Tesla will construct a huge battery storage system in Scotland, allowing for better storage of electricity produced by wind turbines.
The company has agreed a deal with global renewable energy platform Matrix Renewables 500 MW / 2-hour (1 GWh) standalone battery energy storage system in Eccles.”

Reply to  Steve Richards
December 27, 2025 1:58 pm

Are there towns call Bloodnok, Bluebottle, Seagoon etc ??

Reply to  Steve Richards
December 28, 2025 12:13 am

The article claims

One GWh is enough electricity to power 750,000 to one million homes for a year

Clearly, the author has no clue what he’s talking about

Leon de Boer
Reply to  Redge
December 28, 2025 7:10 am

Yep clearly the average UK household uses 2700kWh per year so it’s enough to power 370 houses for the year … the maths 1000000000Wh/2700000Wh = 370

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Leon de Boer
December 29, 2025 7:15 am

If one applies the 2 hours per day factor, it becomes 4400 houses for 2 hours per day for the year.

Rod Evans
Reply to  Steve Richards
December 28, 2025 12:49 am

The last place in the world where a battery storage is required is Scotland.
The issue they have is too many wind turbines all able to produce when the wind blows but nowhere to send the power so they get shut down and we all have to pay for the instruction to curtail energy production. Having a full battery capable of 1GWh storage won’t help to transmit the power to England where it can be consumed.
This is a white elephant project sold to bureaucrats who do not understand the problem they are dealing with.
The other point worth making is this. When market saturation already exists it is pointless building more capacity, yet that is what is happening in Scotland te cost of paying for excess capacity is growing with every new turbine put on line with stat/tax payer funded guarantees.
Crazy does not begin to describe it.

Ron
Reply to  Rod Evans
December 28, 2025 4:19 am

This is going to be fun to watch…keep voting Labour and Green! Elections have consequences.

Bob
December 27, 2025 2:08 pm

Very nice Vijay, the only thing we have to do is remove government mandates, subsidies, tax preferences and favored treatment. Get government out of the picture and the whole stinking mess goes away.

johnn635
Reply to  Bob
December 27, 2025 3:15 pm

‘massive government subsidies’. Are people really so stupid that they imagine government creates the subsidies from thin air.We PAY for this through taxes annd inflated electricity prices.

cgh
Reply to  johnn635
December 27, 2025 4:31 pm

Yes, but dismally millions are just that stupid. We here of “free” health care all the time when it is being provided by government. We had an idiot of a Prime Minister in Canada who stated, “the budget will balance itself.” This goof racked up gigantic deficits in the expectation that people would never understand that they would pay for all this deficit spending via a brutal inflation.

Mary Jones
Reply to  cgh
December 27, 2025 6:12 pm

His successor is no better.

Keitho
Editor
Reply to  cgh
December 28, 2025 1:04 am

They will balance the budget by bumping you off.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  johnn635
December 29, 2025 7:17 am

Not from thin air, no. People believe it is merely a matter of printing more currency.

December 27, 2025 2:28 pm
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
December 27, 2025 2:48 pm

Seriously? Your first link shows nothing other than nuclear making a comeback, the second is a puff piece about Bill McKibben that no-one in their right mind will take seriously, and the last is about China – a place where you can’t get a straight answer to anything, even if you live there.

If this is all you’ve got, you’re the one who’s dreaming.

cymbal-monkey-2608990315
Reply to  PariahDog
December 27, 2025 3:03 pm

Your first link shows nothing other than nuclear making a comeback,

Now that’s some…interpretation.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
December 27, 2025 3:24 pm

And please tell us, How much electricity will all that renewables subsidy farming give us on a windless night ??

Meanwhile.. Here is the global solar and wind compared to reliable sources..

If you call that a “take-over”, you are totally DELUDED. !!

World-Energy-Wind-Solar-2024-Article
clive hoskin
Reply to  bnice2000
December 27, 2025 4:22 pm

And most of it is supplied by COAL………

cgh
Reply to  bnice2000
December 27, 2025 4:35 pm

MUNR specializes in anonymous lying.The reference to China is amusing. This is a country which is building one new coal-fired plant per week.

Reply to  PariahDog
December 27, 2025 3:39 pm

Anyone pretending that wind and solar are “clean” energy, is also either totally ignorant or totally deluded.

There are almost certainly the most environmentally destructive forms of electricity supply over their short life span.

Highly polluting during manufacturing

Environmentally destructive during installation, destroying habitats and farmland alike.

Devastating to avian wildlife in use, as well as causing massive disruption to soils, soil and land creatures and water tables.

Massively polluting at end of life, either by being left in place as they decay spreading fibre and plastic pollution, or buried in huge landfills that leach toxins for hundreds of year.

Wind and solar are the VERY OPPOSITE OF “CLEAN”

And don’t let’s even start on the horrendous damage done by grid batteries !!!

Reply to  PariahDog
December 27, 2025 4:30 pm

Ah.. McGibbon.. a complete and utter brain-washed idiot.

The Billy Madison of “climate” !!

In the USA coal is already making a resurgence.,

Wind and solar are still just a small, niche and erratic supply.

usa-energy
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
December 27, 2025 3:18 pm

image didn’t attach .. try again

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
December 27, 2025 3:21 pm

Did you know that in 2023,

Coal grew 6.5 times as fast as solar in India

And in China, Coal grew TWICE as fast as solar.

Coal-faster-than-solar-in-China
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
December 27, 2025 3:27 pm

Last link…. China energy

China-energy
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
December 28, 2025 12:43 am

Clean energy is still winning. These 10 charts prove it

From your link: “96% of new U.S. power capacity in 2024 was carbon-free; clean energy beat fossil fuels on the grid in March.”

Adding solar panels doesn’t mean they deliver power 24/7. Solar and wind have low capacity factors (20–35%), so fossil fuels still supply most electricity year-round.

A single month where clean energy edges out fossil fuels during mild weather doesn’t equal dominance. Peak demand periods still rely heavily on gas and coal.

Charting The Changes That Will Lead To Renewable Energy Dominance in 2026

From your link: “Renewables will dominate globally by 2026; China builds 3 GW of solar daily.”

Even if renewables grow fast, they still account for less than half of global electricity. Fossil fuels remain the backbone for reliability and industrial baseload.

China’s scale sounds impressive, but context matters: Gigawatts of capacity don’t equal gigawatts of dependable power. Solar output drops at night; coal plants still run to keep factories operating.

China Energy Transition Review 2025

From your link: “Clean generation met 84% of China’s demand growth; fossil fuel decline is imminent.”

Meeting “demand growth” is not the same as replacing existing fossil generation. Coal still provides the majority of China’s electricity.

Massive renewable additions require storage and grid upgrades. Without them, coal remains the fallback for reliability during peak loads and low-sun/wind periods.

The bottom Line is charts often show capacity additions, not actual dependable output. Intermittent sources like solar and wind cannot yet replace fossil fuels or nuclear for continuous, large-scale power. Claims of “dominance” ignore storage limitations, grid constraints, and the fact that energy reliability still depends on dispatchable sources.

As I said to you yesterday, you need to expand your knowledge base and stop lapping up left-wing propaganda.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Redge
December 29, 2025 7:26 am

“New power generation…”
No doubt nameplate capacity.

China is building, yes, but apparently not using. It is for show in too many cases.

You are correct. The links are propaganda, not science, not economics, not real world.

clive hoskin
December 27, 2025 4:06 pm

A couple of months ago a car magazine did a comparison test involving 2 cars.They were BMW”s,one an EV the other petrol powered.They both drove Melbourne(Australia)to Sydney(Australia)The petrol powered car won both in time taken and in cost to get there(2 plus hours and 35$ to get there).EV’s are NOT the answer…….        

Kevin Kilty
December 28, 2025 8:20 am

This same behavior, first pandering then reality, is apparent in the Integrated Resuorce Plans (IRPs) of the utilities. Something I wrote at the Energy Bad Boys substance from Dec. 6…

In the Integrated Resource Plans, six years ago CO2 emitting resources were allegedly to be just about gone at this current time. Four years ago the utilities were projecting that electrifying (electrocuting everything is excellent humor, guys) transportation, industrial heat, and residential heating were not only going to be no problem, but were exciting new sources of revenue. Two years it was becoming apparent things were not going quite as hoped and that those new resources to balance the energy books could be found in energy efficiency and demand reduction. This year they have given up completely on the end of coal plants.

So many ways to duck reality until … you can’t.