EU Doubles Down on ‘Green’ Energy Transition at UN Climate Summit
The EU continues to push a fossil fuels phaseout, despite serious disagreements among the summit’s key players.
The EU continues to push a fossil fuels phaseout, despite serious disagreements among the summit’s key players.
The European Parliament finally recognized that renewables alone cannot support the EU’s green energy transition, shadow rapporteur Rob Roos told The European Conservative.
Opponents regard the EU’s Clean Energy Package as an affront to democracy.
Government says reliance on oil and gas to enable green transition will continue “over the coming decades.”
High installation costs and poor efficiency in below-freezing temperatures make heat pumps a bad choice for Scotland.
The European Union’s drive for ever more intrusive regulations to combat climate change are being met with resistance from member states. Despite the Commission’s best efforts to push the Green Deal, exorbitant economic costs and voter discontent has sparked a renewed interest in nuclear energy.
“Energy policy has become security policy,” the local official in charge of transitioning to sustainable energy production said, calling for better collaboration between agencies.
With Carola Rackete’s candidacy—she will be running as an independent—critics fear further tension and division within the Left Party.
The opposition’s comments are likely to have received a nod of approval from those more sceptical of the ‘net zero’ agenda.
The prime minister made it clear these licences are not intended to disrupt his drive towards carbon ‘net zero.’
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