How to fix the world’s energy emergency without wrecking the environment
Even as they firefight, governments must resolve the conflict between safe supply and a safe climate
This year’s energy shock is the most serious since the Middle Eastern oil crises of 1973 and 1979. Like those calamities, it promises to inflict short-term pain and in the longer term to transform the energy industry. The pain is all but guaranteed: owing to high fuel and power prices, most countries are facing soggy growth, inflation, squeezed living standards and a savage political backlash. But the long-run consequences are far from preordained. If governments respond ineptly, they could trigger a relapse towards fossil fuels that makes it even harder to stabilise the climate. Instead they must follow a perilous path that combines security of energy supply with climate security.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Power struggle”
Leaders June 25th 2022
- How to fix the world’s energy emergency without wrecking the environment
- What Emmanuel Macron should learn from losing his majority
- A wave of unrest is coming. Here’s how to avert some of it
- How fighting inflation could imperil the euro zone
- More of Britain’s pension assets should be used to drive business growth
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