The EU gaslights environmentalists by redefining ‘green’ energy
By: Rachel Marsden
How long-familiar energy sources turned into something 'new' during a
crisis
For years, the Western world saw profits in new green and renewable energy
sectors and sang from their hymn book on the need to reduce carbon footprints by
ditching fossil fuels, or to avoid a potential Chernobyl-style environmental
catastrophe by ditching nuclear power. Western officials were going to either
earbend their citizens or drag them kicking and screaming towards a new world
rife with questionably executable green dreams – all in the interest of
supposedly preventing Earth’s temperature from rising by 1.2 degrees Celsius
from pre-industrial levels. Good luck controlling the temperature of your own
room to within a single degree for any length of time, let alone that of the
entire planet. Still, officials agreed on the pretext for the green shift,
however dodgy, and forged ahead with their new investments and ventures. The
European Green Deal was a centerpiece of the Western strategy, with €1.8
trillion euros of investments.
It’s now clear that the EU has failed to scale up their projects in time to
offset the disastrous energy crunch caused by their genius decision to sanction
their own gas supply from Russia in order to stick it to Russian President
Vladimir Putin. Unfortunately for the EU’s top economy, Germany, it had bet a
few too many of its chips on domestic green projects without any obvious
alternative to its reliance on energy imports (and particularly on Russian gas)
to power Europe’s primary industrial engine.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has since been scrambling – burning up phone lines
from Qatar to Canada – in an attempt to find alternative sources, with no
immediate solution in sight. Meanwhile, German industry is warning of shutdowns
while authorities brace for energy and water rationing and what’s shaping up to
be a very tough and precarious winter.
Berlin can’t even get repaired parts back from Canada for its own Nord Stream 1
joint pipeline with Russia because of Western anti-Russian sanctions blocking
their shipment. Of course, there’s another option that’s literally just laying
around – Gazprom’s Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which had been sanctioned by
Washington in a power move against the EU economy even before the Ukraine
conflict. Germany refuses to fire it up. Because, what’s a little national
energy emergency when you can force Putin to have to flip a switch to redirect
the gas to another nation state client, right? That’ll teach him, for sure.
Next door, in France, officials of the EU’s second biggest economic engine have
been cheerleading Western solidarity and anti-Russian sanctions, all while Paris
has been discreetly enjoying its position as the top importer of Russian
liquefied natural gas.
If the hypocrisy of playing footsie under the table with Russia while whispering
sweet promises of more weapons to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky wasn’t
amusing enough, the EU has also been trying to figure out a way to revert to old
energy habits while pretending that they’re still on a green path.
The energy shortage due to sanctions amid the conflict in Ukraine has created an
even more desperate need for a U-turn on the limitations of green and renewable
energy. Which explains why the EU parliament voted this month to officially move
the goalposts on what constitutes green energy by simply changing the labeling
of investments in gas and nuclear energy to 'green'. You have to almost feel
sorry for environmentalists. What’s next? Will Germany’s recent reversion back
to dirty coal in its desperation for energy sources soon be reclassified as
green, too? At this rate, nothing would be surprising.
Imagine being an environmentalist in a Kafkaesque conversation with an EU
official who’s trying to tell you that fossil fuels are now 'green', as is a
potential future Chernobyl, even though their official policy had long been the
exact opposite. You’d feel like you were being gaslit in the same way that a
partner would argue that you must’ve imagined that you saw another person’s text
messages on their phone.
Some officials are trying to at least pay lip service to the idea of sticking
with their climate agenda, while backpedaling hard and fast on the strategy in
reality. Perhaps they’re hoping that people just don’t notice or care too much
amid such a dire and costly energy shortage. German Economy Minister Robert
Habeck is apparently one such official. “On the one hand, the climate crisis is
coming to a head. On the other hand, Russia’s invasion shows how important it is
to phase out fossil fuels and promote the expansion of renewables,” Habeck said
in April.
But that lofty posture was before the impact of the EU’s own sanctions sent
its member states scrambling – straight towards any available fossil fuels.
Changing semantics to suit economic interests to the chagrin of
environmentalists arguably started with Paris. Before the Ukraine conflict,
France had long felt the heat from environmentalists over its nuclear power
plants, which were neglected and allowed to corrode, with a view of phasing them
out and shutting them down, to replace them with greener renewable energy. But
then French President Emmanuel Macron solved the country’s nuclear image and
reliance problem earlier this year by successfully lobbying the European
Commission to draft a proposal labeling nuclear energy and gas as green, just in
time for Macron to promote a new French “nuclear renaissance” and the
construction of 14 new nuclear reactors in his reelection campaign.
What was dirty is now magically clean, and what was the dirty past is now the
promising future – all at the drop of a hat. Move over windmills and solar
panels – the future of sustainable clean energy is natural gas fossil fuel and
nuclear reactors in what’s clearly a triumph of pragmatism over ideology.
As Berlin, Paris, and other European capitals struggle to replace Russian gas while staring at a winter of potential energy shortages, all bets are off. Sorry, environmentalists. The EU no longer has the luxury of fussing with the wallpaper while the house is burning down.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN