Putin is the new climate change: Von der Leyen drags the Russian president into her green fantasies
By: Rachel Marsden
The European Commission president did her best to obfuscate both the real cause and the real impact of the renewable energy agenda
It’s hard to tell if she’s blaming him or crediting him, but European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told a meeting of the Paris-based
Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) on February 13th
that “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s attempt to blackmail our union has
utterly failed. On the contrary, he really pushed the green transition.”
The word “pushed” is telling – and projecting. Because that’s exactly what she’s
been doing – evoking Putin to manipulate EU citizens into acceptance of a
profitable system of greenwashed authoritarianism. Putin’s been a busy guy here
in Europe lately. Just the other week, he was apparently pushing Europe’s
farmers and their tractors onto highways.
Why does Queen Ursula always have to sound so shady? “Last year, in 2023, for
the first time ever, we produced more electricity from wind than from gas,” she
said. How many ways did her battle-hardened brigade of bureaucratic paper-cut
Purple Hearts have to parse the data to come up with that bright spot? Because
the truth is that, at 37% of the EU’s electrical power, renewables are still
only just a half a percent more prevalent than fossil fuels at 36.5%, according
to the EU’s own data – and that really hasn’t changed much over the past several
years.
And it’s not like wind, at 13% of the bloc’s electrical production, is doing the
heavy lifting in powering Europe’s industry when 60% of its energy is still
imported, most of which is from fossil fuels. If wind and solar were actually
capable of maintaining European industry, then why was the economy minister of
the bloc’s economic engine, Germany, bragging to citizens that he was doing his
part to stick it to Russian President Vladimir Putin by taking ever shorter
showers? Why did I personally have to freeze my arsch off at some of the local
swimming pools in Berlin last month as the water temperature plunged to
accommodate an energy austerity plan if wind was such a panacea?
Germany is the canary in the coal mine for the EU green transition, having
gone all-in, and clearly wind and solar weren’t ready for prime time when the
cheap Russian gas tap was effectively turned off – first through the EU’s own
anti-Russian sanctions that complicated payment for sales, then when it was
blown up altogether.
This is why the German economy is taking a hit, with the country’s own national
statistics office now qualifying the economic environment as “marked by multiple
crises,” as last year’s GDP dropped by 0.3%, with high energy prices as one of
the top contributing factors. If mighty gusts of wind could singlehandedly
prevent German deindustrialization as industry bails to less fantasy-powered
jurisdictions, then Queen Ursula’s speeches alone would have long since done the
job.
In this latest one, von der Leyen laments the Russian president’s attempt to
“blackmail” Europe with fossil fuels while at the same time saying that
whatever’s left of them can’t disappear fast enough. If that seems like a
contradiction, it is. The truth is that Putin just served as a convenient
pretext for something that Brussels had long wanted to do anyway, but was
prevented from doing because of how it feared the average EU citizen would
react.
It’s now obvious what the impact of the green transition is on inflation as
energy costs have skyrocketed. If the EU had pulled a stunt like this by simply
caving to Washington’s relentless insistence that it renege on Nord Stream
pipeline gas, telling Europeans that it was pivoting to far pricier US liquified
natural gas – at least until it could figure out how to use the basic elements
of earth to live like a developed country using tactics from the Stone Age –
people would have gone ballistic and wondered what the heck was really going on.
Putin came along just in time to rescue the transition from the growing
skepticism of the climate-change excuse, fueling popularity for the right-wing
populist parties calling the Brussels establishment out for its use of it to
manipulate citizens into compliance with their agenda.
What agenda, exactly? Profits, first and foremost. Ask the farmers currently
protesting all across Europe against a heavy-handed Brussels bureaucracy put
into place that increasingly controls their production using everything from
climate change policies that put precious farmland into the state’s hands
through buyouts of climate change policy offenders, to pro-Ukraine trade
policies that crush domestic production in favor of Ukraine’s Western-backed
corporate Big Farming, like Bayer, Monsanto, Cargill, and DuPont.
When the Ukraine conflict went hot, Queen Ursula just substituted Putin for
the climate-change excuse, then kept hammering the need to plough cash into
renewable energy projects that just happen to be dominated by European and
American big finance and their investors, like US defense contractor General
Electric, Germany’s BASF, Shell, and BP. Von der Leyen dropped a hint herself
that all this is about not wanting to share the pie outside of her coffee
klatch.
“The old fossil fuel economy is all about dependencies. The new clean energy
economy is all about inter-dependencies,” she said, pointing out that “clean
energy can be produced anywhere.” And that means being able to keep the profits
among your friends and supporters. Interesting that she used the term
“inter-dependencies” rather than “independence.” You’d think that national
sovereignty would be a good thing. But apparently not when it could mean a
country being able to tell Brussels to bugger off.
Both climate change and national security are profitable causes, first and
foremost. They should just be honest about that rather than trying to hard-sell
it with virtue-signaling and bogeymen. But it’s the increased authoritarianism
to control emissions or the ubiquitous “Russian threat” by introducing policies
and tools that can also be used to quash domestic dissent, that are even more
troubling. And for Brussels that seems to be a nice bonus.
It all smacks of increased supranational consolidation and control over a system
that’s being reoriented to profit members of a certain political caste and their
cronies. And they’re apparently willing to use whatever fearmongering they
figure works best to subdue the masses into compliance. Putin should really
start charging appearance fees for being constantly used in their advertising.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN