Fossil
fuels are doomed – and Trump can’t save them
28
January 2026
Wesley
Morgan
https://www.unsw.edu.au/newsroom/news/2026/01/fossil-fuels-are-doomed-and-trump-cant-save-them
Yes,
climate change is worsening and action is uneven. But the shift away from
fossil fuels is beginning.
The past
three years have been the world’s hottest on record. In 2025, Earth was 1.44°C
warmer than the long-term average, perilously close to breaching the Paris
Agreement goal of 1.5°C.
This
warming is fuelling Australia’s current record-breaking heatwave. Other
consequences are visible globally, from Iran’s crippling drought to
catastrophic wildfires and unprecedented floods in the United States to deadly
cyclones hitting southern Asia.
We know
what to do to tackle the climate crisis: replace fossil fuels with clean energy
technologies such as solar, wind, electric vehicles and batteries. We are well
on our way. Globally, the power produced by renewables overtook coal last year.
Petrostates
such as Saudi Arabia and the US have made trillions from oil and gas. Now they
are fighting a rearguard action to prolong fossil fuels. The US is pushing
European nations to buy its gas, for instance.
But most
countries have seen the writing on the wall. In November, the COP31 climate
talks in Turkey are expected to deliver a global roadmap away from fossil
fuels. Dozens of countries will meet in Colombia in April to fast-track the
transition. The road ahead is bumpy. But the end of fossil fuels may finally be
coming into view.
No
holding back clean energy
There’s
no one trying harder to slow the clean energy transition than US president
Donald Trump. During his bid to return to the White House, Trump pressed oil
executives for US$1 billion (A$1.4 bn) in campaign finance, promising a
windfall in return.
In 2025,
he increased subsidies for fossil fuel producers, weakened environmental laws,
gutted Biden-era support for clean energy and moved to block clean energy
projects, even some near completion. The US is now one of the world’s biggest
exporters of liquefied natural gas (LNG) and oil.
But clean
energy growth has proved difficult to kill. Despite Trump’s efforts, domestic
solar generation is still expected to grow 46% in the next two years while
electricity output from fossil fuel plants falls.
Trump is
betting fossil fuels are the key to future American power. He made no secret of
the fact the US military raid on Venezuela earlier this month was aimed at
increasing oil production. He has implored US oil companies to invest billions
to revive the country’s battered oil infrastructure. The response was lukewarm.
ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods said Venezuela was “uninvestable”.
Developing
Venezuela’s oil reserves assumes there will be demand for decades to come. But
the world now faces an oversupply of oil, even as sales of electric vehicles
grow strongly in many countries. Last month, battery electric vehicles outsold
petrol cars for the first time in Europe.
Electrostates
rising
While the
US doubles down on 20th century fossil fuels, China is betting on an electric
21st century. It is emerging as the first electrostate, dominating production
and export of solar, wind, batteries and EVs. China is now the world’s biggest
car exporter. Most new Chinese cars are powered by batteries, not oil.
China’s
manufacturing might has driven down the price of batteries, the main cost of
EVs. As EVs get cheaper, emerging economies are finding they can leapfrog
fossil fuels and move straight to solar panels and EVs – even if the national
power grid is limited or unreliable.
Commodity
price trends show surging global demand for copper, silver and other metals
needed for mass electrification. Worldwide, investment in clean energy
technologies first overtook fossil fuel investment ten years ago. In 2025,
clean investment was more than double the investment in coal, oil and gas.
Clean energy is where the world is headed, whether Trump likes it or not.
China,
India and Pakistan are rapidly making the shift to renewable power. Developing
nations from Nepal to Ethiopia are taking up electric transport to slash the
cost of importing fossil fuels.
A new
roadmap away from fossil fuels
This
week, the US formally withdrew from the Paris Agreement. But no other country
has followed.
For
decades, the COP talks have focused on “cutting emissions” without dealing
directly with the use of coal, oil and gas. But at the 2023 talks, nearly 200
countries agreed to “transition away from fossil fuels”.
At last
year’s COP30 talks, host nation Brazil proposed a roadmap to phase out fossil
fuels. More than 80 countries backed the idea, including Australia, but
pushback from Saudi Arabia and Russia kept it out of the final outcomes.
In
response, Brazil is working to develop a roadmap for phasing out fossil fuels.
This – or something similar – may be formally adopted at the next climate talks
in November.
While
COP31 will be held in Turkey, Australian climate minister Chris Bowen will have
a key role as “President of Negotiations” and will steer global discussion
ahead of the summit.
Bowen
plans to lobby petrostates to support a managed shift away from fossil fuels,
drawing on Australia’s experience as a major exporter of coal and LNG facing
its own transition. Korea – Australia’s third largest market for thermal coal –
will retire its entire coal fleet by 2040.
Government
modelling suggests Australia’s coal and gas exports could plummet 50% in value
in five years as global demand falls. Independent modelling suggests the
decline for coal could happen even faster if countries meet their climate
targets. Policymakers must plan to manage this transition.
Coalitions
of the willing?
Frustrated
by slow progress, a coalition of nations is separately discussing how to phase
out fossil fuels. The first conference will take place in April in Colombia.
Here, delegates will discuss how to wind down fossil fuels while protecting
workers and financial systems. Some nations want to negotiate a standalone
treaty to manage the phase-out. Conference outcomes will also feed back into
the UN climate talks.
Pacific
island nations aim to be the world’s first 100% renewable region. Ahead of
COP31, Australia and island nations will meet to progress this.
Progress
is happening
In an
ideal world, nations would rapidly tackle the existential threat of climate
change together. We don’t live in that world. But it may not matter.
The shift
to clean electric options has its own momentum. The question is whether the
shift away from coal, oil and gas will be orderly – or chaotic.The Conversation
Wesley
Morgan, Research Associate, Institute for Climate Risk and Response, UNSW
Sydney
This
article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
Read the original article.

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