It would be naïve to ignore the economic and political changes that the decarbonisation agenda of the largest economies will bring
Media mentions – Climate & Geopolitics
The EU’s Green Deal could have as great an effect on regional geopolitics as on the Earth’s climate
A report last month by the European Council on Foreign Relations concluded that rich countries will have to help plug the financial holes
As soon as it becomes a concrete proposal on paper, and the colours are nailed tothe mast on what it means, it then gets down to the detail of negotiation and it becomes very tricky
For Europe and Germany, built on exports, “you see the rules-based order crumbling, and you worry about the same kind of blackmail coming from China
The fast-shifting global political climate comes as the real-world climate continues to throw up fresh signs of becoming more erratic
Just 10% of Europeans believe the U.S. would intervene on their behalf during a military crisis, according to a survey by the European Council on Foreign Relations
BNN Bloomberg refers to ECFR’s latest polling data on the transatlantic relationship
When fully implemented, the Green Deal will change everything! It is a truly ambitious project that aims to transform the entire European economy
The Austrian newspaper refers to ECFR’s latest policy brief on the European Green Deal
The Green Deal will transform European patterns of production and consumption, with global economic and political repercussions (…). In short, this is a geopolitical issue
Il Sole 24 Ore mentions ECFR and Bruegel’s policy brief to explain how the New Green Deal will redraw geopolitics
The EU will have to become a “global standard-setter”, encouraging other countries to take more action on climate change in order for the deal to succeed
Euronews picks up the joint paper by ECFR and Bruegel proposing seven actions that would provide foreign policy support for the European Green Deal