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You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/05/opinion/climate-change-europe-conservatives.html
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How to Stop the Biggest Threat to Europe’s Green Transition | How to Stop the Biggest Threat to Europe’s Green Transition |
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For years, the European Union has been laying the foundation for what may be the world’s most ambitious climate policy: the European Green Deal, which puts Europe out in front in the global fight against climate change. This formidable bundle of policies steers countries to build renewable energy resources, find ways to improve energy efficiency and significantly cut greenhouse gas emissions in the process. | For years, the European Union has been laying the foundation for what may be the world’s most ambitious climate policy: the European Green Deal, which puts Europe out in front in the global fight against climate change. This formidable bundle of policies steers countries to build renewable energy resources, find ways to improve energy efficiency and significantly cut greenhouse gas emissions in the process. |
But now, the Green Deal is in peril as a school of thought that frames the green transition as an elitist plot against ordinary people gains followers in Europe. It’s a political strategy that is potent in the moment but is bound to fail in the long run. | But now, the Green Deal is in peril as a school of thought that frames the green transition as an elitist plot against ordinary people gains followers in Europe. It’s a political strategy that is potent in the moment but is bound to fail in the long run. |
In Italy, the hard-right government of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has called the Green Deal “climate fundamentalism” and is trying to soften it. In Sweden, a center-right minority coalition dependent on the hard-right Sweden Democrats has cut the climate budget. The autocrats in power in Hungary who have long battled Europe’s green policies have much in common with ultranationalists in Slovakia, who tried (but failed) to appoint a climate-change denier as environment minister. | In Italy, the hard-right government of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has called the Green Deal “climate fundamentalism” and is trying to soften it. In Sweden, a center-right minority coalition dependent on the hard-right Sweden Democrats has cut the climate budget. The autocrats in power in Hungary who have long battled Europe’s green policies have much in common with ultranationalists in Slovakia, who tried (but failed) to appoint a climate-change denier as environment minister. |
And in Germany, members of the hard right and conservatives recently forced the beleaguered Green Party to accept much-diluted legislation to phase out home heating systems that run on fossil fuels. The hard-right Alternative for Germany, alongside the Christian Democrats, impugned the Greens’ “impoverishment program” as a “heating massacre” that would force Germans to sell their houses. The cacophony was no doubt music to the ears of Germany’s gas lobby, which is worried about new subsidies and rules to encourage a switch from gas heat and air conditioning to heat pumps that may eventually make the gas grid unnecessary. | And in Germany, members of the hard right and conservatives recently forced the beleaguered Green Party to accept much-diluted legislation to phase out home heating systems that run on fossil fuels. The hard-right Alternative for Germany, alongside the Christian Democrats, impugned the Greens’ “impoverishment program” as a “heating massacre” that would force Germans to sell their houses. The cacophony was no doubt music to the ears of Germany’s gas lobby, which is worried about new subsidies and rules to encourage a switch from gas heat and air conditioning to heat pumps that may eventually make the gas grid unnecessary. |
These setbacks for the Green Deal can in large part be traced to the influence of the hard right’s campaigns against climate measures in Europe and beyond. And the arguments seem to resonate in part because the climate provisions unnerve people facing high living costs and turbulent times. | These setbacks for the Green Deal can in large part be traced to the influence of the hard right’s campaigns against climate measures in Europe and beyond. And the arguments seem to resonate in part because the climate provisions unnerve people facing high living costs and turbulent times. |
But the assault underway on Europe’s climate strategy would be unthinkable were it not for middle-of-the-road conservative parties, many of which previously stood behind environmental legislation. For example, the European Parliament’s conservative European People’s Party, once an advocate of rigorous climate policies, recently voted with the hard right to scale back new standards for commercial farming and vehicle emissions and to weaken a law to restore nature. Today, conservatives across the region believe there’s more to be won obstructing climate policies alongside the hard right than supporting them. | But the assault underway on Europe’s climate strategy would be unthinkable were it not for middle-of-the-road conservative parties, many of which previously stood behind environmental legislation. For example, the European Parliament’s conservative European People’s Party, once an advocate of rigorous climate policies, recently voted with the hard right to scale back new standards for commercial farming and vehicle emissions and to weaken a law to restore nature. Today, conservatives across the region believe there’s more to be won obstructing climate policies alongside the hard right than supporting them. |