Polls suggest that the German people are highly committed to the energy transition, with 79 percent of the public calling climate change a “very serious problem” in a recent Eurobarometer poll. Yet, for years now, no new onshore wind farm has been built in Germany without objection from nearby residents, with court fights often required to resolve the status of the project. Work on critically needed power lines, to move electricity from Germany’s windy north to its industrial south, has slowed to a crawl amid public opposition. In Britain, onshore wind construction has largely shut down, again due to objections from local communities. In countries where wind projects can be built, getting the necessary environmental and other permits can take as long as eight or nine years.
Offshore wind faces similar issues over environmental permits, but it faces some hard physical realities too. Across much of the North Sea, the sea floor is littered with unexploded ordnance from World War II. Specialised crews must investigate and clear any bombs before projects can move forward. Constructing offshore wind farms also requires special boats, and a shortage of these looms as the goals ramp up. The biggest issue is that only a minority of the world’s coastlines are suitable for development with the existing technology, in which turbines are planted in the sea floor in relatively shallow water. In most places, the continental shelf drops off too quickly for that. Along these coasts a new technology is required: floating offshore wind. Europe has installed the first such turbines and is poised to lead the way, but the technology is still in its early stages.
The financing mechanisms to support development of large renewables projects remain a work in progress. For wind farms, the rules effectively require developers to lock in supply contracts for turbines long before construction begins, leaving the turbine makers exposed to commodity risk. This theoretical problem became very real in 2022, as soaring steel and other input prices undermined the economics of contracts signed a few years earlier. The European wind-turbine manufacturers have been losing money recently, a bizarre development at a time when Europe is planning a huge escalation of its clean-energy goals. They may need direct state aid to get through this difficult period, or contracts may need to be reopened to allow for the rising costs.
The European Union has a plan to solve many of the bottlenecks. Anyone who wants to know how serious the bloc is about speeding the transition should watch how that plan develops over the coming year or so. The centrepiece is a requirement that EU member states make a decision on environmental permits for projects within two years of the time a developer files an application. In addition, the EU wants member governments to set aside large “go-to” areas where renewable-energy development will be explicitly encouraged, and to issue permits in those areas within one year of the application being filed. If member governments comply with these requirements, the result will be a radical acceleration in the timeline for renewables development. In the near term, this may be the single most important test of how serious Europe is about its new goals.
The lengthy court fights over projects must also be shortened. Again, the EU has a plan: to codify into European law the principle that renewables development is an overriding public interest. Now, environmental laws meant for the protection of birds, fish or marine mammals often have that legal status, whereas renewables projects do not.
These same fights are playing out around the world, in any country that has adopted strong measures for environmental protection. In other words, the local goal of preserving landscapes and wildlife can come into conflict with the global goal of averting climate breakdown. In a sense, this merely demonstrates how acute the environmental crisis has become: we are out of easy answers, and no one gets a pass on having to make difficult choices and trade-offs. But environmental laws written in the 1970s are proving inadequate for resolving the conflicts in a timely way, and the energy transition cannot proceed at the pace required unless a better balance is struck.
If the people of Europe are serious in their plans to move away from fossil energy, we will see a wave of national laws passed over the coming year to meet the goals the EU has established. We will also see large sums of money begin to move into nascent industries like green hydrogen, green steel, low-carbon cement and so forth.
Even if it can be accelerated, the transition is still going to take decades. Perhaps the question now is whether the great lessons of 2022 will stick in the minds of European leaders long enough for them to make good on the promises they made when the Russian bombs began to fall.