Once upon a time in the green energy transition

Article by Chris Uhlmann, courtesy of The Australian

18.07.2025

Climate Change and Energy minister Chris Bowen, left and wind turbines producing electricity spinning over a solar park near Klettwitz, in Germany. Pictures: News Corp

The world once cheered Germany’s green fairytale, which had a title that evoked a brisk, healthy walk in the woods: Energiewende.

Now its energy transition is a Brothers Grimm nightmare as naive ideals are devoured by the wolves of reality.

The dark parable is starkly told in the first paragraphs of a recent open letter to the Chancellor from an alliance of worker representatives in Germany’s industrial heartland.

“We are in the most severe economic crisis since World War II,” it begins.

“Just last year, at least 100,000 industrial jobs were eliminated altogether. The political promises of the previous federal government for a ‘green economic miracle’ have amounted to smoke and mirrors. In reality, never before have so many well-paid jobs been under threat as they are today.

“If the energy transition is, as some say, ‘an operation on the open heart of our economy’, then so far this operation has failed miserably. We must admit: The patient is in danger of dying on the operating table.

“For 35 years, (solar) and wind power have been legally privileged and subsidised, but to this day they contribute no more to supply security than they did three decades ago. Instead, they generate hundreds of billions in grid costs.”

The signatories include union leaders and the elected chairs of works councils who represent workers in industries employing more than one million people.

It will come as no surprise to learn that Australian Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen is a big fan of Berlin’s scalpel work.

Wind turbines spin with the Jaenschwalde coal-fired power station, which is among Europe's biggest coal-fired plants, in the background near Peitz, Germany. Picture: Sean Gallup / Getty Images

In a meeting with his German counterpart in 2024 he said: “We have no more important partner than Germany when it comes to energy transformation. Germany is a great industrial powerhouse of the world.”

That Germany is facing an industrial crisis spawned by its energy policy is obvious to anyone who doesn’t work in fiction. Berlin’s failure, like Bowen’s, can be measured in the billions squandered to cover the illusion of cheap, green power.

London’s Financial Times reports: “Germany is exploring ways to fund multibillion-euro subsidies for energy-intensive companies as part of Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s pledge to boost the competitiveness of the country’s heavy industries. The measure is part of efforts to reduce electricity costs for industrial groups to revitalise the eurozone’s largest economy after its longest postwar period of stagnation.”

That stagnation is entirely self-inflicted, as the union leaders’ letter to the Chancellor notes.

“Germany’s dual exit from nuclear power and coal has made us dependent on unreliable (solar) and wind power and expensive gas imports. We pay for this with the highest electricity prices in Europe. Never before has our power supply been so expensive and insecure. These high prices are not only socially unfair, they now threaten our economy, our prosperity and social peace.”

It is unlikely the officials would have been cheered by a signature Bowen bon mot, delivered in a sadly underreported speech in their homeland.

“There is no geopolitical crisis that can stop the sun shining and the wind blowing,” Bowen said. “Renewable energy, supported by storage and transmission, is secure energy.”

CAUTIONARY TALE

Precisely the opposite is proving true in Germany, and everywhere else where weather-dependent generation rises to become a dominant form of power.

Rather than seeing Germany as a cautionary tale, Australia is conducting the same open-heart surgery on its eastern national electricity market, the most complex and most vital piece of machinery in the land.

All of the same symptoms of distress are evident. The patient is dying.

You could cover the continent in wind turbines and solar panels and spend countless billions on batteries, and without a 100 per cent backup from a fuel source that system will never be guaranteed to deliver reliable power on demand every second of every day of the year. In an electricity system, that is the only kind of power that counts.

US Energy Secretary Chris Wright underscored this in an appearance before a congressional committee.

Unlike our Chris, Wright ran an energy company and has degrees in mechanical and electrical engineering.

He told the committee: “If you’re not there at peak demand, you’re just a parasite on the grid because you just make the other sources turn up and down as you come and go.

“Our electricity markets have rewarded low-value electricity and we’ve subsidised (it) to put more of it on. We need to have people bidding into a marketplace that are both delivering the same product, which is 24/7 electricity, because that’s the only thing customers will buy.”

Australia is flooding its eastern grid with high-cost, low-value parasite power, driven not by engineering or economics but by politics.

At the same time, we’ve vilified coal, the fuel that still supplies the bulk of our electricity, and gas, the only scalable replacement. The result: high gas prices and soaring system costs, and the only model you need to check this fact is your electricity bill. The truth is writ large in $6.8bn in federal government power bill subsidies and in the businesses going to the wall.

‘There is no geopolitical crisis that can stop the sun shining and the wind blowing,’ Chris Bowen said in a speech in Germany. Picture: Jason Edwards

It gets worse. If Australia is serious about cutting global carbon emissions then that demands we end our exports of coal and liquefied natural gas, ripping $160bn a year from our economy. As cover for this act of economic self-harm, the government inserts the word green in front of energy and builds a fantasy future on the quicksand of industries that do not exist.

Bowen’s reason for being in Germany last year was to forge a green hydrogen partnership. Green hydrogen sounds like the future of fuel, until you realise it devours more energy in production than it returns.

In practical terms, it’s about as efficient as burning wet wood.

But the more projects fail, the more the government is determined to burn taxpayer dollars as fuel.

At least six large-scale green hydrogen projects were shelved or cancelled in Australia between late 2024 and mid-2025. Rystad Energy analysis shows around 99 per cent of announced green hydrogen capacity in Australia has stalled at the concept or approval stage, with CSIRO data showing at least 61 projects quietly scrapped before reaching final investment decision.

When Origin Energy pulled out of the Hunter Valley Hydrogen Hub in NSW, Bowen stepped in to prop it up with another $432m in taxpayer cash.

The idea of this project is to supply green hydrogen to Orica’s ammonia plant in Newcastle.

But look closely and you learn all this cash is being hosed at the meagre goal of replacing 7.5 per cent of the plant’s daily natural gas demand, meaning 92.5 per cent of ammonia production still will rely on fossil fuel. The gas saved will be redirected into supporting the grid.

So net-zero change in the amount of gas burned in Australia.

Centre for Independent Studies energy research director Aidan Morrison notes the hub has already gobbled up grants of $70m from the Australian Renewable Energy Agency and $45m from NSW. “The proportions of public spending required highlight the depravity of the endeavour,” he says.

“And whilst I know the game Chris Bowen is playing, this poses serious questions for Orica. What exactly are they trying to achieve?

“Does Orica not realise that the same set of delusions that led Germany to its present crisis currently (has) a firm hold on Australia’s government, particularly our Energy Minister?”

The Australian energy story is built on delusions cut from the pages of The Magic Pudding. In this fairytale we put our faith in endlessly regenerating, cost-free energy unconstrained by physics and material limits.

In Germany, the sun appears to be setting on the weather-dependent energy fairytale. Picture: Daniel Roland / AFP

But we are just a chapter in an epic work of global mythology that tells of a planet acting in unison to cut carbon emissions by replacing fossil fuel with weather-dependent generation and batteries.

Let’s take a whip around the real world to see how that magical thinking stacks up. This column has noted before that the gold standard measure for global energy production and consumption is the Statistical Review of World Energy. The latest report records that in 2024 the world burned more coal, oil and gas than in any previous year, surpassing the record set in 2023.

Eighty-two per cent of the world’s total energy demand, what’s called primary energy, was met by fossil fuels. Wind and solar combined contributed less than 4 per cent.

There is rapid growth in wind and solar generation but it is not replacing hydrocarbons, it is adding to the world’s ever-increasing demand for power.

The review also records that global carbon dioxide emissions rose again in 2024, reaching yet another all-time high. And everywhere you look, these numbers are confirmed by government deeds that are routinely at odds with government myth-making.

Like most of the mainstream media, the Financial Times is signed up to the goal of hitting net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, but its recent feature on coal highlighted an inconvenient truth.

“Today the world burns nearly double the amount of coal that it did in 2000, and four times the amount it did in 1950. Every minute of every day, 16,700 tonnes of coal are excavated from the ground – enough to fill seven Olympic swimming pools.”

And 57 per cent of the world’s coal is burned in China.

MEANWHILE IN CHINA …

Despite the endlessly hyped record levels of investment in wind, solar and batteries, coal still dominates China’s electricity sector, accounting for 58 per cent of its generation in 2024. Eighty-six per cent of China’s primary energy comes from coal, oil and gas. That number will not change in a hurry because China is building new coal-fired power plants at the rate of one a week.

China remains the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, accounting for about a third of the global total. Along with India, it contributed 62 per cent of the increase in global emissions last year.

Australian politicians usually like to focus on Beijing’s green credentials, but on a diplomatic tour through the Pacific Foreign Minister Penny Wong offered a rare moment of candour. When pressed by journalists about pursuing even more extreme emissions targets than those Labor has already signed up to, Wong pointed the finger at Beijing.

“China is the world’s largest emitter. Its actions will determine whether we can achieve our target,” the Foreign Minister said.

Australia accounts for just more than 1 per cent of global carbon emissions. We could unplug the nation and China would replace our yearly carbon footprint in a fortnight.

Pretending that our share of emissions will decide the fate of the Great Barrier Reef, save a seahorse or alter global weather patterns is not just a fantasy, it’s a lie.

COAL HARD TRUTHS

If you want to know what the world is up to, follow the money, because Beijing’s interest in coal does not end at its borders. Chinese banks led global coal-related financing, allocating nearly $US248bn ($364bn) to the industry between 2022 and 2024, according to the Still Banking on Coal 2025 report by Urgewald, a German environmental group that tracks fossil fuel finance.

US banks ranked second, providing about $US51bn across the same time, led by Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup.

Australia may be shutting coal-fired generation but the rest of the world still wants the cheap, reliable power that it delivers. In India, coal accounts for about 52 per cent of primary energy, while in Indonesia, it provides nearly 66 per cent of electricity generation.

Of course, each of these countries also has a great green fairytale of their own, so it’s always best to check how headlines stack up against stories.

Water vapour rises from cooling towers of the Jaenschwalde coal-fired power station, which is among Europe’s biggest coal-fired plants, near Peitz in Germany. Picture: Sean Gallup / Getty Images

In February, Reuters reported: “India has the second-largest clean power capacity development pipeline globally after China, with nearly 56,000 megawatts of new renewables, hydro and nuclear capacity under construction.”

Read on and you learn: “However, the country is also building 30,000MW of new coal-fired capacity, which will preserve coal’s status as India’s primary power source even after the construction boom.”

The short story is India is in the process of building four times the total coal generation on Australia’s eastern grid. Those new coal-fired plants will be generating near capacity 24/7, while the new wind or solar developments will deliver well less than half their claimed capacity when averaged over a year.

One of the headlines on Indonesia’s energy transformation is its bid to build Southeast Asia’s largest floating solar farm. Less newsprint is devoted to the fact private coal-fired plants built to power nickel smelters are exempt from environmental reviews and are not counted in the country’s pledges to reduce fossil fuel use.

Most of the smelters are owned by Chinese companies and the exemption is justified on the grounds that nickel is vital to the green energy transition.

South Africa generated a lot of glowing press at the 2021 global climate jamboree when it partnered with the EU, France, Germany, Britain and the US to pledge it would transition from coal-dependent energy to a low-carbon economy. The investors group pledged $US8.5bn across five years to assist in this endeavour, and it is estimated that the full cost of this project is in the order of $US99bn.

Alas, in February, South Africa officially designated coal as a critical mineral.

“For us, coal is a critical mineral because it generates substantial revenue,” Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe told the Investing in African Mining conference in Cape Town.

“The coal sector remains highly attractive for new and expanded investments.”

Coal delivers about 72 per cent of South Africa’s primary energy, and the government forecasts that won’t change over the next decade.

In Morocco, the big energy news is that Britain has pulled out of a project to transmit power generated by North Africa’s abundant wind and sunshine through underwater cables.

Britain’s Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said in a statement that it would no longer support the $33bn project because of a “high level of inherent risk, related to both delivery and security”.

The UK’s drive to lead the world in weather-dependent energy has helped deliver some of the highest power prices in the world. This has fuelled a surge in energy poverty, with 24 per cent of households behind on their bills and average debts topping £1700 ($3500). Energy-intensive industries are collapsing: manufacturing output is now at its lowest point in 35 years, as firms warn high electricity costs are making it impossible to stay competitive.

Meanwhile, in South America, Argentina is rapidly expanding oil and gas production in its Vaca Muerta shale basin, with output rising sharply and new pipelines under construction to support exports. State energy firm Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales is investing heavily and has signed LNG deals with Europe, helping drive an expected $US8bn energy trade surplus in 2025.

Brazil is busy burnishing its green fable as it prepares to host this year’s UN climate summit. It comes as its government is ramping up fossil fuel production, auctioning off 172 new oil and gas blocks in June, including 47 in the environmentally sensitive Amazon basin. State oil giant Petrobras plans to boost output by 33 per cent, aiming to top one billion barrels a year by 2030.

Canada is pressing the pedal to the metal on all its resources, expanding oil and gas production and building major new pipelines as it aims to be an energy superpower. It still has ambitious emissions targets but plans to get there by investing heavily in technologies Australia refuses to countenance: carbon capture and nuclear energy.

TRUMP’S MOVES

Just about the only country that isn’t pretending to care about hitting carbon-cutting targets is the US. Donald Trump began demolishing the nation’s climate policy on day one of his second term, quitting the Paris Agreement, ending offshore wind projects and defunding key Biden-era programs.

Within 52 days, his administration had reversed emissions standards, paused clean energy initiatives, and gutted regulatory agencies.

In a December essay, Oxford economist Sir Dieter Helm delivered a sweeping indictment of global climate policy, arguing the net-zero consensus is breaking down because it is built on illusion. Helm contrasts the ritual of yearly climate summits with the unbroken rise of carbon emissions and the stubborn 80 per cent share of global energy still held by fossil fuels.

He exposes the core deceit: net-zero targets are based on territorial emissions rather than consumption, allowing rich nations to offshore their carbon footprint, turning climate policy into a worldwide accounting shell game.

There is no energy transition.

“Oil output is over 100 million barrels a day, coal is maintaining its markets, and gas is booming,” Helm writes.

“Just as there was no transition from wood to coal, or from coal to oil, there is no transition from coal, oil and gas to renewables, even in electricity.”

One transition is all too real: from low to high-cost electricity.

Helm demolishes the claim that weather-dependent generation is cheaper than other sources of energy. “The system costs of renewables are what matters,” he writes.

“As more and more are added to the electricity system, they require not just a very large and costly rebuilding of the grid, but also more and more back-up generation for when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine. This is not controversial: it is well-known but widely simply ignored.”

Search the globe and everywhere facts puncture myriad green myths. No electricity grid anywhere runs reliably on wind, solar and batteries without 100 per cent backup from hydro, nuclear, coal, gas or imports. Every nation with high wind and solar penetration has high electricity prices. Almost all nations exploit the energy resources they have because energy is the economy.

Access to cheap, abundant energy is the driving force in making a country wealthy. No matter what they say, most nations are more interested in energy security than hitting net zero by 2050, or any other year.

And every nation has its own green energy fable. Ours will not have a happy ending.