Energy Crisis

IEA’s Birol debunks three myths about global energy crisis

Birol Three myths about the global energy crisis

Photo: Fatih Birol/Twitter

Published

September 7, 2022

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

September 7, 2022

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

“As the global energy crisis continues to hurt households, businesses and entire economies worldwide, it’s important to separate fact from fiction. There are three narratives in particular that I hear about the current situation that I think are wrong – in some cases dangerously so,” Executive Director of the International Energy Agency (IEA) Fatih Birol wrote in an op-ed for the Financial Times.

  • Myth 1: Russia is winning the energy battle

A short-term jump in energy export earnings can’t offset a permanent loss of trust and markets, Birol said and added the Kremlin is doing itself long-term harm by alienating the EU, its biggest customer. Its oil and gas sector will also struggle under sanctions, he asserted.

According to Birol, the absence of western companies, technologies and service providers as a result of sanctions is a major risk for the country’s capacity to exploit oil and gas, and especially for its LNG projects.

  • Myth 2: Today’s crisis is a clean energy crisis

The head of IEA said energy policy makers told him they have regretted not moving faster to build solar and wind plants, to improve energy efficiency.

In fact, more low-carbon energy would have helped ease the crisis, and a faster transition is the best way out of it, Birol said.

In his view, when people blame clean energy for the crisis, they are moving the spotlight away from the real culprits: the gas crunch and Russia.

  • Myth 3: Today’s crisis will stop us from tackling climate change

The crisis can actually be a historic turning point towards a cleaner and more affordable and secure energy system, Birol wrote and added the crisis is a stark reminder of the unsustainability of the current energy system, which is dominated by fossil fuels.

According to Birol, the transition to a more affordable and more secure energy system is already happening. The proofs are REPowerEU, the United States Inflation Reduction Act, Japan’s GX (Green Transformation), and clean energy plans in China and India.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Spajic Japanese Itochu Montenegro waste energy

Spajić: Japanese company Itochu eyes Montenegro’s waste-to-energy project

09 January 2026 - Prime Minister of Montenegro Milojko Spajić said a 50 MW incinerator is about to be built for municipal waste

ContourGlobal 500 MWh standalone BESS facility in Bulgaria

ContourGlobal installs 500 MWh standalone BESS facility in Bulgaria

09 January 2026 - ContourGlobal inaugurated a standalone battery energy storage system of 202 MW. It is participating in Bulgaria’s day-ahead and intraday electricity markets.

slovenia subsidies economy companies electricity

Slovenia to aid energy-intensive companies with EUR 30 million per year

09 January 2026 - Minister of the Environment, Climate and Energy Bojan Kumer said the bill addresses the serious challenges facing this segment of Slovenia's economy

Serbia developing legal framework CO2 storage

Serbia developing legal framework for CO2 storage

08 January 2026 - Serbia's draft law on hydrocarbon exploration and exploitation will include permanent disposal of CO2 in geological formations of depleted deposits