The
European Union is increasingly treating the transition to renewable energy as a
"security imperative" to eliminate its vulnerability to geopolitical
"blackmail". In April 2026, prominent figures and reports have
intensified this message, characterizing fossil fuel dependence as a tool of
coercion for authoritarian regimes that use energy revenues to fund conflicts.
The
"Security Imperative" and Geopolitical Risks
High-level
EU officials and political groups have recently pushed for a decisive break
from fossil fuels:
"War-Driving"
Regimes: In late April 2026, Hannah Neumann, a German MEP and Chair of the EU
Parliament's Delegation for Iran, argued that structural dependence on fossil
fuels exposes Europe to coercion by authoritarian regimes in Russia and the
Middle East.
Ending
Blackmail: The EPP Group has described current efforts to phase out Russian gas
and oil as a "promise" that Europe will never again be vulnerable to
energy blackmail or inadvertently fund external wars.
Impact of
New Conflicts: The escalation of conflict in the Middle East in early 2026 has
further driven home this point, leading to an estimated €24 billion in
additional spending on fossil fuel imports in just 52 days.
On April
22, 2026, the European Commission presented the AccelerateEU plan to address
these vulnerabilities:
Homegrown
Energy: The plan prioritizes domestic clean energy (renewables and nuclear) to
lower electricity prices and increase resilience.
Renewable
Targets: It aims to increase the capacity of renewable electricity deployed per
year to 100 GW.
Permitting
Reforms: By the end of 2026, the EU aims to reduce permitting times for
renewable projects to a maximum of two years and establish "renewables
acceleration areas".
Electrification:
The plan includes a key performance indicator to reach a 32% share of
electricity in final energy consumption by 2030, reducing the need for oil and
gas in heating and transport.
Progress
and Upcoming Milestones
The
transition is already showing structural results, though challenges remain:
2025
Milestone: For the first time, wind and solar generated more electricity than
fossil fuels across the EU in 2025.
Russian
Phase-Out: The EU is on track to stop all Russian pipeline and liquefied
natural gas (LNG) imports by November 2027.
Critical
Meetings: EU Energy Ministers are scheduled to meet in Cyprus on May 13, 2026,
to discuss a "catalogue of replicable measures" for rapid fossil fuel
substitution.
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