As European gas prices soar 50% in two weeks, Simon Stiell warns EU leaders that ‘meek dependence’ on imports leaves nations vulnerable to geopolitical shocks.
BRUSSELS — The Iran war is delivering a stark warning to the global community about the dangers of fossil fuel reliance, the United Nations’ top climate official will declare on Monday, urging governments to treat the energy crisis as a wake-up call to accelerate the green transition.
In prepared remarks for a high-level gathering in Brussels, Simon Stiell, Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), will argue that the conflict-laden spike in energy prices proves that oil and gas dependency is a strategic liability.
“Fossil fuel dependency is ripping away national security and sovereignty, and replacing it with subservience and rising costs,” Stiell is scheduled to tell EU officials and government ministers.
Although the theatre of war is geographically distant in the Middle East, the European Union is suffering its immediate consequences. European gas prices have jumped by 50 percent during the two-week conflict, exposing the continent’s fragile energy architecture.
A Continent Held Hostage by Imports
Stiell will point to Europe’s staggering import figures—more than 90 percent of its oil and 80 percent of its gas come from abroad—as evidence of a structural weakness that leaves consumers “at the mercy of geopolitical shocks and price volatility.”
“Europe is more reliant on fossil fuel imports than almost any other major economy,” he will say.
The price surge has sent EU leaders scrambling to draft emergency measures to shield households and industries from the pain, desperate to avoid a repeat of the 2022 energy crisis when Russia slashed gas deliveries and sent prices to record highs.
‘Completely Delusional’
In the longer term, the European Commission maintains that its climate strategy—focused on replacing imported fossil fuels with locally produced renewable and nuclear energy—will secure energy sovereignty and cut ties to volatile global markets.
However, internal pressure is mounting. Governments including Italy and Hungary are urging Brussels to weaken its climate policies to provide immediate cost relief for struggling industries.
Stiell will dismiss this backlash as dangerously shortsighted. He will argue that bending to political pressure and delaying the energy transition would be “completely delusional.”
The Sunlight Strategy
Instead, Stiell will frame renewables not as an environmental luxury but as the ultimate tool for energy independence. Wind and solar power, he will argue, offer cheaper energy, create jobs in clean-technology industries, and—critically—provide secure supplies that cannot be cut off by foreign powers or blockaded in narrow shipping lanes.
“Meek dependence on fossil fuel imports will leave Europe forever lurching from crisis to crisis,” Stiell will warn.
“Renewables turn the tables. Sunlight doesn’t depend on narrow and vulnerable shipping straits.”
The address directly links climate policy to hard geopolitical reality, reinforcing a message that leaders across the globe are being forced to confront: in an era of conflict and disruption, energy sovereignty is national security.
