Europe | Green policies

The EU should be the world’s heat-pump pioneer

But the union is falling behind in its efforts

A heatpump being installed in Berlin, Germany
That’s the way to do itPhotograph: Imago
|BERLIN

Fearing for her reappointment, Ursula von der Leyen, boss of the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, soft-pedalled over unpopular green policies in the run-up to the European Parliament elections on June 9th. Mrs von der Leyen had proclaimed in 2019 that the EU Green Deal, the union’s strategy to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, was the EU’s “man-on-the-moon moment”.

But in February she blocked a draft law to slash the use of pesticides in farming, and loosened some of the environmental strings tied to the subsidies of the EU’s common agricultural policy. Still more striking was her decision to delay publication of a heat-pump action plan that had been scheduled for early in the year to an unspecified time after the elections.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The EU’s role as heat-pump pioneer”

No way to run a country

From the July 6th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Europe

Will a new “pact” of ten laws help Europe ease its migrant woes?

It will require an extraordinary number of institutions to work together

Amid the bombs, Ukrainians rediscover the beach

Odessa gives itself permission to tan again


Who was behind the arson attacks on railways before the Olympics?

With thousands stranded, suspicion falls on Russia or Iran


Italian right-wingers have renamed Milan’s airport after Silvio Berlusconi

A finger in the eye of those who detested the late populist leader

European countries are banding together on missile defence

The Ukraine war shows how dangerously few interceptors they have

Peter Magyar is reinvigorating Hungary’s struggling opposition

Attacking Viktor Orban’s corruption wins votes for a political newcomer