The Parliament Magazine

Why green and global are two sides of the same coin

If the European Green Deal is to succeed, the EU must foster a global approach and help other regions to achieve their own energy transition­s, argues Nathalie Tocci in her new book, A Green and Global Europe

- Words by Gabriele Rosana Gabriele Rosana is a Brusselsba­sed journalist and policy analyst writing about EU affairs

A GREEN AND GLOBAL EUROPE

Author: Nathalie Tocci Publisher: Polity

“There cannot be a green Europe in a brown world. Getting the EU’s ecological transition right means becoming global too.”

A er years of focusing on Europe’s global role and its strategic autonomy in a contested internatio­nal order, Nathalie Tocci has found in the Green Deal a new personal research path, as well as an axis providing new meaning for the future of the European political project.

Tocci’s latest book, A Green and Global Europe, reects this change in focus. She developed the idea during a visiting professors­hip at the Harvard Kennedy School in late 2021. While on the other side of the Atlantic, she managed to “break my own mental silos and bring what I had learnt in one area of my profession­al life into the others”.

Currently director of the Rome-based think tank

Istituto AŒari Internazio­nali (IAI), honorary professor at the University of Tübingen in Germany, and an independen­t non-executive director of Italy’s Eni, one of Europe’s biggest oil and gas companies, Tocci brings to the table a wide range of experience in policy, research and corporate governance.

However, she is perhaps best known for serving as a long-time special adviser to two High

Representa­tives of the Union for Foreign AŒairs and Security Policy – —rst Federica Mogherini and, until recently, Josep Borrell. In this capacity, she dra ed the European Union’s 2016 Global Strategy, a major policy roadmap for the internatio­nal projection of the Union.

“Europe’s rationale in the 21st century can only be global in nature,” Tocci argues in the preface to A Green and Global Europe, and “nowhere is this clearer than on climate change and the energy transition”. A green Europe, she writes, “represents a normative, strategic, economic and political project all at the same time”.

Green and global are “two sides of the same coin”, Tocci tells The Parliament, adding that the Green Deal can potentiall­y mend the cracks made by a long sequence of crises closer to home, žom the failure of the Constituti­onal Treaty to the rise of nationalis­tic populism.

“Against the backdrop of the pandemic and the war in [Ukraine], and the renewed sense of solidarity among Europeans they brought about, the EU’s green agenda has given the Union a new lease of life and a route towards the re-legitimisa­tion of the EU project as a whole,” she says.

For the Italian foreign policy expert, “it is like killing two birds with one stone – by doing something that is needed to save us and the planet, while rejuvenati­ng and reigniting the European integratio­n project at the same time”.

The Green Deal is key to the EU’s strategic autonomy and energy independen­ce, and to spearheadi­ng the bloc’s new growth model – as the European

Institutio­ns o en argue.

But a green Europe only makes sense if embedded in a decarbonis­ing world; such an agenda will succeed only if it makes Europe the —rst net-zero continent and spurs the rest of the planet to follow suit.

“Today, the EU is ahead of the global green curve. It represents under eight per cent of C02 global emissions, and that —gure is fast declining,” the analyst notes in her book.

Energy transition­s have been remarkably diŒerentiated worldwide, žom India to China, but “it is the direction of travel which must be the same; there cannot be a one-size-—tsall approach”, Tocci says.

In A Green and Global Europe, she argues that “Europe shall keep the ambition of being a climate leader – but there can be leaders to the extent of which there can be followers”. In this sense, “the EU is best positioned to develop policies vis-à-vis third countries to accelerate the journey of diŒerent world regions without having the arrogance and the presumptio­n of knowing and de—ning what those transition­s should look like”.

Tocci takes the historic agreement at COP27, the most recent United Nations climate conference, to pay poorer countries for loss and damage caused by climate change as proof the green transition will need to be addressed through the lens of global co-operation, not

“The EU hides behind strategyma­king when the moment requires action”

geopolitic­al competitio­n (such as the United States-China rivalry).

“In the COP27 negotiatio­ns, the EU sided with the Global South, perfectly aware that decarbonis­ation is poised to slow down unless the major cleavage between developed and developing economies is bridged,” she explains. “And Europe knows well it will have to do a lot of —nancial heavy li ing in this respect.”

Looking back at her previous stint in dra ing the EU’s Global Strategy, Tocci recognises climate and energy as being part of a holistic roadmap featuring diplomacy, developmen­t and defence as well as other policy areas such as —nance and education.

“The diŒerence between then and now is that today climate and energy are not just part of the nexus. They are at the core of it, the top priority through which to address all other issues. Now the EU is far more involved in the business, and acting in a way that can accelerate progress in a particular direction,” she says.

It is one of the reasons she does not recommend indulging in the creation of a Global Strategy 2.0: “O en the EU hides behind strategyma­king when the moment rather requires action. At present, we should be far more in the business of just doing it.”

To succeed, however, the EU administra­tion must start —ring on all cylinders, Tocci argues in her book. Whereas climate increasing­ly features in the work of diŒerent EU institutio­ns and can count on the co-ordinating role of a dedicated Executive Vice-Presidency of the European Commission, the green transition has yet to become a priority both internally and externally for those services not expressly tasked with the matter.

“Now there are around —ve or six people in the EEAS, the EU’s diplomatic arm, dealing with it. It is by far more than just a few years ago, showing the trend is moving in the right direction. But this is peanuts compared to what is needed,” she says.

A green Europe is taking shape, and the next stop is going truly global.

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 ?? ?? A Green and Global Europe author Nathalie Tocci
A Green and Global Europe author Nathalie Tocci
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