New on OnlySky: The fossil fuel era is ending in flames


I have a new column this week on OnlySky. It’s about how the fossil fuel era will end – not with a whimper, but with a bang of exploding refineries.

Despite sanctions, price caps and other attempts to punish Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, the Western world can’t kick the habit of buying its oil. The dollars and euros are the lifeblood of Vladimir Putin’s genocidal war machine. Now Ukraine is changing the calculus, with fleets of domestic drones and cruise missiles destroying Russian refineries, pipelines and other fossil-fuel infrastructure. And Russia’s military seems helpless to do anything about it.

This is something every politician should be thinking about. Even if you think climate change is a liberal hoax (or are paid by lobbyists to say that you do), there’s also a national security argument for renewables. The Ukraine war has proven that oil and gas infrastructure can’t be protected, especially with drones becoming cheaper and more capable all the time. But a society with solar panels on every roof has no such vulnerable points. What will it take for the world to learn that lesson?

Read the excerpt below, then click through to see the full piece. This column is free to read, but members of OnlySky also get special benefits, like member-only posts and a subscriber newsletter:

For years, Russia served as Europe’s gas station. Despite having few other industries of note, Russia has abundant oil and gas reserves, which it was happy to sell to European nations to cement their economic links.

However, Vladimir Putin’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine showed Europeans the folly of depending on a belligerent, warmongering dictator for their energy needs. Like any drug dealer, Putin wanted his customers hooked so he’d have leverage over them. At the start of the war, Russia engaged in brazen energy blackmail, threatening to cut off the fuel supply unless the E.U. looked the other way.

But to the Europeans’ credit, they didn’t knuckle under. They slapped Russia with sanctions, sought out alternative sources of fuel, and redoubled their efforts to shift to renewable energy. Putin’s attempt at blackmail fizzled: in the first month of 2025, Russia’s last gas pipeline to Europe was shut off for good.

Continue reading on OnlySky…

Comments

  1. Katydid says

    From time to time the news spits out stories about how well Germany has done in converting to solar energy. It gives me hope, because if cool, damp Germany can thrive on solar power, there’s no reason for sunny Phoenix, Arizona (for example) or Las Vegas to drag its feet.

    Lest anyone think the USA is the only place where rightwing nuts object, my formerly-sane-turned-right-wingnut religious Dutch friends recently called me, absolutely furious that Rob Jetten is now their new prime minister. They’re simply besides themselves in rage that Jetten favors green policies. Their church (an American-created megachurch that set up shop in the Netherlands) has been preaching against him.

  2. John Morales says

    Claim: in the first month of 2025, Russia’s last gas pipeline to Europe was shut off for good.

    Counter-claim: https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2025/02/12/russian-gas-supplies-to-europe-via-turkstream-hit-new-all-time-high-in-january-a87962

    Russian gas supplies to Europe via the TurkStream gas pipeline set a new record last week, according to data from the European Network of Gas Transmission System Operators (ENTSOG), the state-run TASS news agency reported Wednesday.

    Gas flows through the TurkStream pipeline reached a record weekly level between Feb. 3 and 9, with over 390 million cubic meters (mcm) pumped through the Strandzha-2 compressor station on the Turkish-Bulgarian border. This marks the highest weekly delivery since the pipeline’s launch in January 2020, surpassing the previous record of 376 mcm set between Jan. 13 and 19.

    The pipeline also set a new daily supply record, peaking at 56.7 mcm on Monday, breaking previous highs several times throughout the week.

    Since Ukraine shut down its transit of Russian gas to Europe on Jan. 1, TurkStream has become the only route delivering Russian gas to European markets. Last year Ukraine transmitted some 15 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas to the EU, a supply that has now stopped, increasing the pressure on Europe to find a new source of gas to replace this gas.

    Tsk. Flawed premises make for invalid arguments.

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