EuroNews (English)

How Europe’s energy crisis is feeding the election campaign

- Robert Hodgson

The recent energy crisis has partially vindicated EU decarbonis­ation policy: if Europe had only moved more quickly to deploy wind, solar and oth‐ er renewable energy sources and re‐ duce its dependence on fossil fuel im‐ ports, Moscow would have had a lot less leverage over western Europe as it prepared for war.

But if president Putin gambled that the EU would turn a blind eye to his 2022 invasion of Ukraine rather than do without cheap Russian gas, he must be disappoint­ed. One of the first policy responses from Brussels a er tanks rolled into its eastern neighbour was the RePowerEU plan, with raised targets for renewable en‐ ergy deployment and accelerate­d per‐ mitting.

In fact, Moscow had been throttling gas supplies in the months pre‐ ceding its invasion, but the 2022/23 winter was not as bitter as feared, and the EU surprised even itself by the rapidity with which it cut demand by almost a fifth while finding alterna‐ tive sources of supply - a boon in particular for US suppliers of fracked gas.

So, while nowhere near 2022 crisis levels, gas prices still remain signifi‐ cantly higher than they were before Russia launched its all-out war on Ukraine - exacerbati­ng a cost-of-living crisis that has become a central cam‐ paign issue as the EU heads for elections in June.

“From the devastatin­g global im‐ pact of the COVID-19 pandemic to the illegal Russian invasion of Ukraine, we have seen shockwaves disrupting our economy and our societies,” Commis‐ sion Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič said at an event in Paris last week.

“Not least, the energy price and cost of living crises that followed in their wake,” he said in a speech at the prestigiou­s university Sciences Po on 24 April, during a conference on the European Green Deal that Šefčovič himself directs.

The Slovak politician noted that public acceptance for the changes that need to be made to reach the EU’s climate goals was waning. “From the recent farmer protests to the rise in support for populism cultivatin­g a resistance to climate policies, we can see signs of wariness among our citi‐ zens,” he said. “So we must continue to cultivate the support of Europeans and European businesses for green policies,” Šefčovič said.

The European People’s Party is al‐ ready the largest in the EU parliament and hoping to gain from an expected shi to the right in the forthcomin­g election. This could be part of a rever‐ sal of the vaunted ‘green wave’ seen in 2019, which in large part steered the European Commission, albeit un‐ der an EPP president, towards putting the Green Deal at the centre of its policy agenda.

Voter concerns around high infla‐ tion, energy prices

The centre-right group identifies high inflation, energy prices and in‐ terest rates among major concerns for voters, and promises in its election manifesto “decisive” action to tackle them. “To do this, we need a policy that is not clouded by misguided ide‐ ology but rather rests on solid factual grounds and social responsibi­lity,” it reads.

If it has become a well-worn cliché that elections are about “the economy, stupid”, then it’s a pact that is recognised not only on the political right and Europe has much to think about. EU countries are emerging from the highest inflation rates seen since the Great Inflation of the 1970s (an episode characteri­sed by the Eu‐ ropean Central Bank as “one of the most serious monetary policy failures of the twentieth century”).

Rocketing gas prices in Europe fol‐ lowing Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine and the closure of the main pipelines into the EU, played a signifi‐ cant part in the latest wave of infla‐ tion. The design of the EU’s single market for electricit­y arguably com‐ pounded the problem by forcing the wholesale power price to track that of gas even during periods when much of the grid was filled with renewable power from hydro, wind farms and solar arrays.

A recently agreed overhaul of en‐ ergy market rules sought to put a dampener on the kind of swingeing price rises seen in 2022, when house‐ hold electricit­y and gas prices reached record highs, although it stopped short of root-and-branch re‐ form of the pricing mechanism.

The Party of European Socialists, who sit in the ranks of the Socialists and Democrats (S&D) in Brussels and Strasbourg, undertakes to combat en‐ ergy poverty and guarantee supply to vulnerable households. From its polit‐ ical home in Brussels, the S&D under‐ takes to “strive for the reform of the energy market to guarantee price sta‐ bility and affordabil­ity”.

During the energy crisis, there was a boom in sales of heat pumps, ma‐ chines that draw ambient heat from the atmosphere or undergroun­d and

feed it into central heating systems. But the upward sales trend went into dramatic reverse last year. Going for‐ ward, policy makers have to balance direct aid to help struggling house‐ holds pay their bills with finding a way to encourage conversion from fossil fuel, usually gas, heating, and soften the hit from the substantia­l upfront costs.

The European Heat Pump Associa‐ tion represents manufactur­ers in Brussels. The group’s head of EU af‐ fairs Jozefien Vanbecelae­re told Euronews the Commission’s RePowerEU plan had helped drive the surge in sales, setting a target of 60 million more installati­ons by 2030. “This strong support inspired confidence in the sector which led to record sales of 3 million heat pumps in Europe in 2022,” she said.

But the Commission was sup‐ posed to present a Heat Pump Action Plan to accelerate the roll out - and that never emerged. “The plan would have been a crucial missing piece to ensure any potential barriers to faster heat pump roll-out could be ad‐ dressed,” Vanbecelae­re said.

Since 2022 the gas price has come back down, albeit not to pre-invasion levels. “In places like Germany there was a media backlash against nation‐ al measures, and the temporary sup‐ port for heat pumps came to an end in many countries,” she said, referring to Berlin’s U-turn on a plan to phaseout fossil fuel heating.

“So we would say there is definite recognitio­n there but right now it's not being reflected in the policies and measures in place both at EU and na‐ tional level,” said Vanbecelae­re, whose organisati­on says the industry is ready to invest around €7bn up to 2025, creating an estimated 160,000 new jobs.

Tackling poverty beats climate among top voter concerns

It would up to politician­s to per‐ suade voters that public support, not just for heat pumps but the wider en‐ ergy renovation of homes and build‐ ings, is also a good idea, and would pay off in the medium- to long term. A recent survey of 26,000 EU citizens suggested that tackling poverty was top concern of voters, followed by health, jobs, defence, and then cli‐ mate, all cited by between 33% and 27% of respondent­s.

Potentiall­y a litmus test for the new parliament, and the Commission whose leader it will be instrument­al in putting into office will be the set‐ ting of a 2040 target for net green‐ house gas reduction, a requiremen­t under the Climate Law adopted in 2021. The current executive recently followed the advice of an indepen‐ dent scientific panel in recommend‐ ing a cut of 90% below 1990 levels.

If that is going to test the appetite of the political class for pushing through further climate policy, then so is the job of implementi­ng the ra of climate and environmen­t legisla‐ tion adopted under the current man‐ date. Among them is a new emissions trading system (ETS), due to come in‐ to operation in 2027, which will put an additional price on fossil fuels used for both heating buildings and transport. One EPP lawmaker re‐ cently warned of the risk that EU citi‐ zens, most of whom are currently un‐ aware of the incoming policy, may well react angrily if they feel the price rises.

The right-wing European Conserv‐ atives and Reformists party, which polls suggest stand to make moder‐ ate gains and overtake the Greens in the election to become the fourth biggest group in Strasbourg assembly, has just released its election manifesto. In a statement, the group said the Green Deal should to be “turned on its head”, and that the ECR wants “a more balanced and localised climate strategy that does not forget or‐ dinary people”.

Launching the manifesto on 24 April, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said the group wants to end “years of forging ahead in the direc‐ tion of a federalist superstate” and re‐ turn power to national government­s and regions. In its concise, four-page electoral pledge, the ECR pledged to “strongly advocate for a technology neutral approach that champions nu‐ clear energy and makes us a trail‐ blazer in geothermal power”. It is clearly sceptical about the electrific­a‐ tion of road transport.

“We stand firm in our belief that the internal combustion engine, a testament to the power of European cre‐ ativity and ingenuity, can remain commercial­ly viable for years to come by embracing cutting-edge technology and investing in groundbrea­king research on alternativ­e lowemissio­n fuels,” the group says.

In contrast to the Euroscepti­c con‐ servative group, the Greens’ 46-page manifesto goes into considerab­le de‐ tail about how the energy transition can work to the benefit of EU citizens. “Doing nothing will only serve the wealthiest profiting from fossil fuels, while leaving the poorest in our societies to bear the cost,” it runs.

Which of the conflictin­g messages touches the hearts and minds of voters over the next six weeks could have a dramatic impact on the direc‐ tion of EU climate action and energy policy in the coming five years.

 ?? ?? Heat pump installati­ons spiked amid rocketing gas prices in 2022, but sales have since slowed, calling into question an EU target of 10m new homes converted by 2027.
Heat pump installati­ons spiked amid rocketing gas prices in 2022, but sales have since slowed, calling into question an EU target of 10m new homes converted by 2027.
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