"As world leaders, chief executives and nonprofit leaders
descend on Davos, Switzerland, for the annual meeting of the World Economic
Forum next week, military operation will be raging about 1,000 miles away.
Russia’s military operation in Ukraine almost one year ago
has reordered the geopolitical landscape, sent ripples through the global
economy and brought trench military operation back to Europe.
Yet beyond the enormous human suffering and catastrophic
damage inflicted on Ukraine, its people and its cities, one of the military
operation’s most profound impacts has been on global energy markets, and by
extension, on the global fight against climate change.
For much of the last year, the effects of military operation
sent energy prices soaring in many parts of the world, with Europe hit
particularly hard.
Even without that market, Russia remains an energy giant.
And coal has had a resurgence, subduing hopes for meeting goals to rein in
greenhouse gas emissions.
Yet the outlook is not all grim, and nearly a year into the
military operation, the story is not so simple. The Ukraine military operation
has had mixed results when it comes to energy and climate, particularly in the
long term.
Across Europe, gas bills nearly doubled and electricity
costs spiked some 70 percent in the first six months of the military operation,
according to the Household Energy Price Index, which tracks energy costs.
Costs were driven up for a variety of reasons. European
countries began weaning themselves off Russian fossil fuels in a bid to inflict
pain on Vladimir V. Putin’s economy. In turn, Russia sharply reduced its oil
exports to European countries and in July cut natural gas exports to Europe.
But with supplies tight on the global market, Russia was
able to remain a dominant exporter even without Europe, selling more of its
supply to China and India over the last year.
“In the short term,
Russia has been a winner because of the increase in the price of oil,” said
Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of S&P Global and an energy historian.
What’s more, with European countries scrambling to buy gas
and oil from other sources, energy costs began to spike. That had the effect of
pushing some countries to turn to coal.
“Today’s energy crisis has given countries like India and
China a reason to accelerate their coal plans,” said Jason Bordoff, cofounding
dean of the Columbia Climate School at Columbia University.
Altogether, that was not a good scenario for the climate, which
continues to rapidly warm as a result of fossil fuel consumption.
The vast majority of climate scientists say that in order to
limit the extent of the warming, humans should transition to renewable energy
as fast as possible.
High prices and short supplies prompted calls to produce
more fossil fuels, and for a time it looked as if decades of progress in
combating climate change would be erased.
But that might not be so.
While Russia managed to sell its oil and gas elsewhere in
recent months, it has lost the European market for the foreseeable future.
“Putin has destroyed 22 years of economic integration with
the West. And he has also slammed the door on his most important market, which
is Europe,” Mr. Yergin said. “This is the last gasp of Russia as an energy
superpower.”
More important, the military operation — and the sudden
unreliability of Russia as an energy exporter — has prompted many countries to
accelerate their development of renewable energy.
From England to Spain to Albania, countries across the
European continent are rushing to deploy wind and solar power at record rates.
“Notwithstanding the fact there is a bit more coal being
burned by Europe, Europe is doubling down on green. Notwithstanding the fact
that India is buying up every bit of cheap Russian fossil fuels that it can,
Asia is investing in green,” said Rachel Kyte, the dean of the Fletcher School
at Tufts University.
“There is this sort of short-term supply shock story, but
the moral of the story is that you don’t want to be dependent on fossil fuels.
The moral of the story is to be as green as possible.”
The European Union is working to streamline permitting for
renewable projects, countries are racing to build wind and solar farms, and
some countries, including Germany, are slowing plans to phase out nuclear
energy.
“On balance, the energy crisis we’re experiencing now, which
is the most severe we’ve seen since the ’70s, is going to accelerate the clean
energy transition,” said Mr. Bordoff. “It’s probably going to have a negative
impact on emissions in the near term, but a positive impact in the longer
term.”
Among the banks and financial firms that fund the energy
industry, a similar dynamic is playing out. While many financial institutions
have embraced environmental, social and governance goals — also known as E.S.G.
— that include reducing the amount of capital they commit to fossil fuels, some
have relaxed those restrictions.
“Some of the banks have moved away from some of their E.S.G.
commitments over the last year, simply because of the urgency of addressing the
energy crisis,” said Ian Bremmer, founder of Eurasia Group, a research and
consulting firm.
At the end of the day, however, Mr. Bremmer believes that,
“long term, all of this does redound to a faster transition to renewables.”
There are caveats.
While Europe and the United States, for example, have the
money to rapidly build wind and solar capacity, poorer countries in Africa and
Asia are scrambling to meet their immediate needs.
“I fear that this energy crisis will accelerate the clean
energy transition in the developed world, but not in the developing world,” Mr.
Bordoff said.
And in the United States, the past year was also a story of
short-term energy shocks and a longer term investment in renewable power. Gas
prices spiked in 2022 as oil markets tightened. Oil reserves were depleted as
the Biden administration tried to bring down gas prices last year, and will
need to be replenished in the years ahead.
At the same time, President Biden signed into law the
Inflation Reduction Act, which includes a record $370 billion in spending and
tax credits to fight climate change.
While prices have stabilized and Europe has so far benefited
from a relatively mild winter, there are nagging concerns about the future.
Even as European countries embrace renewable power, it will be years before
those sources can fully replace fossil fuels.
“Europe is already on course to get through this winter,”
Mr. Yergin said. “The big worry now, and we’ll hear this at Davos, is next
winter, when they won’t have any Russian gas to put into storage.”
And while that is a dire scenario, it only reinforces what
many experts say is one of the key lessons of the military operation so far:
that renewable energy is not just good for the climate, but good for national
security, too.
“If we were less dependent on globally traded oil and gas,”
Mr. Bordoff said, “we would be more energy secure.”"
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