The Sentinel-Record

EU climate czar: Putin’s war accelerate­d Europe’s transition to renewable energy

- SAMUEL PETREQUIN

BRUSSELS — Russian President Vladimir Putin unwittingl­y accelerate­d the European Union’s green transition with his war in Ukraine, with the 27-nation bloc reducing its dependency on Russian fossil fuels and increasing its renewable energy use over the past year, the EU’s climate czar said Tuesday.

“The European Union now understand­s that if we want to increase our energy sovereignt­y, it can only go through renewables because we have very little gas left, we have almost no coal left, and we have no oil, Frans Timmermans, the commission­er in charge of the European Green Deal, said.

Speaking during an interview with The Associated Press ahead of Friday’s one-year anniversar­y of the Russian invasion, Timmermans said Putin completely underestim­ated the EU’s resilience when Moscow cut off most natural gas flows to Europe amid the war, a strategy European leaders have called energy blackmail.

“He’s been saying publicly that this winter Europeans would freeze and starve,” Timmermans said. “Well, we neither froze nor starved because our food production was at high levels. There were no shortages. And our energy: We managed to make sure he didn’t use this weapon in the effective way.”

The war, however, fueled an energy price crisis in the EU that sent the bills of households and businesses through the roof.

“Our citizens did have to bear the brunt of his manipulati­ons,” Timmermans added. “But he didn’t get us. He didn’t divide us and he certainly didn’t get us on our knees.”

In response to reduced supplies of Russian energy, the EU introduced last year counter measures that included launching a nearly 300 billion-euro ($320 billion) program to promote more efficient fuel use and a faster rollout of renewable power.

The EU also introduced embargoes on Russian coal and oil, accompanie­d by a price cap on Russian oil exports. In addition, the bloc diversifie­d its energy sources by sealing deals for liquefied natural gas to compensate for the loss of Russian gas and fill its stocks for the winter while reducing its use of gas and electricit­y.

As Putin continues to justify his invasion of Ukraine by accusing Western countries of threatenin­g Russia, Timmermans said the Russian leader’s use of energy as a weapon has backfired. In January, gas prices on the European spot market were back to their prewar level.

“He’s losing a lot of income because of this,” Timmermans said. “He’s selling his oil and cut prices to India and China. He has to reduce the sale of gas. He thought he could use that as a weapon. But the weapon turned against him, and it has sped up.”

Some EU member countries reduced their natural gas consumptio­n by more than 20% this year, Timmermans said. The war “is changing the way we relate to energy and it’s helping us understand that we need to move quicker in terms of renewable energy,” he added.

According to the bloc’s data, gas consumptio­n in the EU dropped by 19.3% in the period August 2022-January 2023, compared with the average gas consumptio­n for the same months between 2017 and 2022.

To meet the EU’s goal of becoming climate neutral by 2050, the European Commission supports a target of 45% renewable energy sources in the bloc’s energy mix by 2030 as countries look to wind and solar power to bolster their energy security.

According to a review by global energy think tank Ember, “a massive scale-up in clean energy is on its way” in Europe. Wind and solar in 2022 generated a record 22% of the bloc’s electricit­y and for the first time overtook gas, which accounted for 20%. Coal power accounted for 16%.

“We have a unique opportunit­y to move toward clean technologi­es that will need no emissions, that will be circular, so you don’t have to keep digging up primary materials,” Timmermans said. “If we move in that direction, clean growth is possible. I am optimistic about the potential of that, but we have to move quicker than we’re moving now.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? European Commission­er for European Green Deal Frans Timmermans answers questions from journalist­s during a media conference at EU headquarte­rs in Brussels on July 20, 2022. The EU cut its dependenci­es to Russian fossil fuels and boosted renewables over the past year.
The Associated Press European Commission­er for European Green Deal Frans Timmermans answers questions from journalist­s during a media conference at EU headquarte­rs in Brussels on July 20, 2022. The EU cut its dependenci­es to Russian fossil fuels and boosted renewables over the past year.

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