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Climate Economist Warns Fuel Subsidies Will Backfire Amid Energy Crisis

Europe's energy crisis demands bold solutions—not quick fixes. One expert explains why subsidies could deepen the problem and what should replace them.

The image shows a graph depicting the primary energy consumption by fuel in the reference case from...
The image shows a graph depicting the primary energy consumption by fuel in the reference case from 1980-2040. The graph is divided into four sections, each representing a different fuel source, and each section is further divided into percentages. The text accompanying the graph provides further information about the data.

Climate Economist Warns Fuel Subsidies Will Backfire Amid Energy Crisis

"Fuel discount sounds good—but it's the wrong move," the chief economist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) told Germany's Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland (Friday editions).

Instead of reducing imports, the fuel subsidy would only stoke demand for oil and gas, he warned. "This drives prices even higher, benefiting foreign exporters—not the people who need to fill up their cars or heat their homes." Ottmar Edenhofer argued that the government could better shield citizens from rising costs through direct income support targeted at the most vulnerable groups.

Politicians could have made it clear long ago that cutting oil and gas consumption was essential for energy security, the economist explained. "We didn't need a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz to prove that. Oil and gas prices are a hot-button issue—when they spike, people get nervous." In the 1970s oil crises, he noted, governments responded with energy conservation, not price subsidies. "It's absurd that today's leaders are afraid to explain this necessity to the public."

Edenhofer stressed that, in the medium term, Europe must curb demand to reduce its reliance on foreign oil and gas. "That would give us real leverage to help drive down global prices. This isn't just climate policy—it's geopolitics."

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