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Soaring energy prices driven by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and the potential for disruptions in Russian oil and natural gas deliveries are threatening to derail the global transition away from fossil fuels, just three months after world leaders vowed to take aggressive climate action in Glasgow.
Global oil prices surged past $100 a barrel this week on initial reports of Russian military action, while natural gas prices climbed 60% in Europe, exposing the continent’s heavy reliance on Russian energy imports.
While the calls to increase energy independence have grown louder in response, policymakers remain largely divided on how to get there.
“It may require not only an accelerated transition to renewables, which would be great, but at least in the meantime, an increased rate of hydrocarbon production in North America and the broader Middle East,” said Michael O’Hanlon, a senior fellow and director of research in Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institution. “In other words, we may have to temporarily suspend some of our more ambitious green targets, or at least put them in a certain perspective that they can't be allowed to supersede the importance of dealing with Russia in this crisis right now.”
The Russia-Ukraine conflict threatens to push climate action to the back in countries that have publicly called for the most aggressive cuts to fossil fuels. Germany, for example, has vowed to phase out coal by the end of this decade, while shutting down all remaining nuclear plants by 2022.
Germany’s move to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions have come alongside a growing reliance on natural gas imports from Russia, with two-thirds being imported. That commitment was cemented along with Nord Stream 2, a 765-mile natural gas pipeline connecting Russia to Germany, completed last fall.
But a decision by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to halt certification of the roughly $11 billion pipeline in response to the Kremlin’s invasion, signaled a big turning point for a country that has committed to eliminate all fossil fuels by 2045, ahead of the U.S.
“What's happening right now creates a geopolitical urgency to diversify away from Russian fossil fuels even more quickly, than what would otherwise be mandated by these climate laws,” said Pavel Molchanov, energy group director at Raymond James & Associates. ”Half of Russia's exports and more than half of its government budget comes from oil and gas. That's going to dry up a lot sooner than it would have otherwise if we did not have this war that Russia is trying to unleash.”