Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How Green economics left the West out in the cold
How Green economics left the West out in the cold
Jan 5, 2026 4:25 AM

As they shiver through the season, this frosty winter reminds Americans and Europeans how much they have mon. However, more and more Europeans find themselves out in the cold thanks to environmentalist policies that have caused too many to be unable to afford adequate home heatingthis winter.

Environmentalist policies have undermined the stability of the energy supply itself.A Swiss newspaper, the Basler Zeitung(literally the “Basel newspaper”) reports that one German pany alone “spent almost a billion euros last year on emergency interventions to stabilize the grid. …The costs were thus about half higher than in 2016 (660 million euros) and around forty percent higher than in 2015 (710 million).”

“The reason for the increase,” the paper states, “is the increasing number of solar and wind turbines in Germany.” Both sources are “irregular and often unpredictable,” and the “problems with grid stability could increase significantly with the shutdown of the remaining nuclear power plants.”

Leaving aside the instability, the real cost is paid by German families. “The burden for a family of four is therefore about 25,000 euros, which is more than half of the average gross annual gross earnings,” the paper notes.

Rupert Darwall explores the genesis of these policies in his new book Green Tyranny.Wolfgang Müller, general secretary oftheEuropean Institute for Climate and Energyand a free-market think tank leader in Germany,reviews the book forActon’sReligion & Liberty Transatlanticwebsite.

Darwall writes, “It took only three years for Germany’s Energiewende[Green energy policy] to increase the number of households trapped in fuel poverty by one-fourth.” This trend held true in the UK, as well:

After conducting a market investigation, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) confirmed that the main driver of domestic electricity price increases was not profiteering by panies but the cost of government-imposed obligations and network costs, the latter largelyreflecting the costs of integrating wind and solar capacity. Gas and electricity take up nearly ten percent of the household spending of the poorest ten percent of the population and is their largest item of expenditure after housing.

While squeezing consumers, their employers also felt the pinch.Deutsche Bank concluded in January 2014 that German energy policy had chipped away at its industrial base. “German industrial users paid 26 percent more for pared to the EU average, while the disparity with the United States was even more pronounced,” Darwall writes.

Müller writes that Darwall connects the dots abut how Green policies went from a fringe movement to the dominant social philosophy in much of Europe.

Darwall presents a wealth of details to explain how a powerful Green/Left network managed to occupy key political positions in Europe and the U.S. and to establish (or gain control of) institutions that give them unquestioned authority over the subject. … He also explains how the onslaught on freedom happens openly (if unnoticed by the media and general public) by highlighting a crisis of global proportions – such as man-made climate change – which requires solutions that “normal democracies” aren’t able to provide. They must be settled by a council of experts, which acts outside the democratic process.

Their belief that only peer-approved experts can understand proper policy would result in a global technocracy, or a supranational managerial state. Ultimately Müller, one of Europe’s leading skeptics of Green orthodoxy, says that Darwall substantiates his provocative subtitle (“exposing the totalitarian roots of the plex”).

Read Müller’s review, and you’ll understand why he concludes, “Green Tyranny is a must-read for every person who cherishes freedom and who wants to know how environmentalism could e so powerful that, in some countries, it seems like a new state religion.”

Read his full review here.

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
‘Jesus Had An Economic Plan’: Was it Redistribution?
Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite, professor of theology at Chicago Theological Seminary believes that Jesus had an economic plan. She’s written a book, #Occupy the Bible: What Jesus Really Said (and Did) About Money and Power, and claims that Jesus came to reverse economic inequality. When Jesus announced his ministry as “good news to the poor” and to “proclaim the Year of the Lord’s favor” (Luke 4: 18-19), he meant that he wanted his society to have a year when economic inequality...
Magnanimity and Humility Make for Good Entrepreneurs
Alexandre Havard leading a recent “Virtuous Leadership” seminar with CEOs and entrepreneurs in Latvia, one of the most industrialized and wealthy republics of the former Soviet Union The Acton Institute’s Rome office led its recent Campus Martius Seminarwith Alexandre Havard, the Russian-French author of Virtuous Leadership(2007), Created for Greatness: The Power of Magnanimity(2011)and founder of the Moscow- and Washington, D.C.-based Harvard Virtuous Leadership Institute. Havard, speaking with Zenit’s Ed Pentin in an article following the seminar, said that during today’s...
The ‘High Tide of American Conservatism’ and Where We are Today
Given all the reassessment going on today about conservatism and its popularity and viability for governing, I mend picking up a copy of The High Tide of American Conservatism: Davis, Coolidge, and the 1924 Election by Garland Tucker, III. The author is Chief Executive Officer of Triangle Capital Corporation in Raleigh, N.C. Over the years, I’ve highlighted how Coolidge’s ideas relate to Acton’s thought and mission. And while I’ve read and written a lot about Coolidge, I knew next to...
Rev. Sirico on the Hugh Hewitt Show
Rev. Sirico will be on the Hugh Hewitt Show today at 8:20pm EST to discuss his book, Defending the Free Market. Listen to the show on your local Salem station or live online here. ...
The Separation of Union and State
Solidarity designed by Thibault Geoffroy, from The Noun Project When I moved to west Michigan, one of the things that struck me the most were distinct cultural differences between the different sides of the state. While I was pursuing a master’s degree at Calvin Theological Seminary, I worked for a while in the receiving department at Bissell, Inc. I remember being surprised, nay, shocked, that a manufacturer like Bissell was not a union shop. (All those jobs are somewhere else...
Mennonite-owned Company Joins in HHS Fight
Conestoga Wood Specialties of Pennsylvania, with 950 employees, has filed suit against the government’s HHS mandate. The Mennonites, who trace their religious roots to the 16th century, have about one million members worldwide. Mennonites understand that life begins at conception, and the owners of Conestoga Wood Specialties do not want to be forced ply with a mandate that conflicts with their faith. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer: “Because of that provision in the policy, because our clients are paying for...
Video: Novak Award Winner Says Religion Inspires Hope, Creativity in Crisis
Prof. Giovanni Patriarca, recipient of the Acton Institute’s 2012 Novak Award given recently in Rome at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas, was interviewed by RomeReports Television News Agency in a video released Friday. Articulating the main points of his lecture “Against Apathy: Reconstruction of a Cultural Identity,” Patriarca told RomeReports that Western democratic society is abandoning its traditional values and, therefore, its very culture of responsible freedom and creativity. He placed part of the blame of the West’s...
‘Liberating Labor’ and Right-to-Work
The Michigan legislature’s historic vote today on the right-to-work issue raises the important question: Do labor unions offer the best protection for the worker? Liberating Labor: A Christian Economist’s Case for Voluntary Unionism by Charles W. Baird answers that question and explains the Catholic social teaching on the issue. In theory, unions foster good relations between employers and workers and prevent mistreatment or exploitation in the workplace. Pope Leo XIII sanctioned trade unions in Rerum Novarum during the Industrial Revolution;...
Economic Freedom: Vital for All
On Nov. 28, the Canada-based Fraser Institute released the eighth edition of its annual report, Economic Freedom of North America 2012, in which the respective economic situation and government regulatory factors present in the states and provinces of North America were gauged. Global studies of economic freedom, such as the Heritage Foundation’s 2012 Index of Economic Freedom and the Fraser Institute’s Economic Freedom of the World 2012, rank the United States and Canada as two of the most economically free...
Big Gains for the Union Liberation Movement
The Michigan legislature passed right-to-work legislation today, a landmark event that promises to accelerate the state’s rebound from the near-collapse it suffered in the deep recession of 2008. The bills are now headed to Gov. Rick Snyder’s desk. The right-to-work passage was a stunning reversal for unions in a very blue state — the home of the United Auto Workers. Following setbacks for organized labor in Wisconsin last year, the unions next turned to Michigan in an attempt to enshrine...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved