Renewables: Unstoppable Security Solution

Greenpeace
Solar Action in Luxembourg. © Joshua Marx / Greenpeace
Greenpeace Luxembourg activists from Belgium, Spain and Germany call on the Luxembourg Minister of the Economy to demand the massive promotion of renewable energies.
© Joshua Marx / Greenpeace

I am living through my fourth war in my four decades on this planet.

Beyond the raw, immediate impact my family and I in Lebanon, and countless others are experiencing on the ground, I am watching a deeper crisis unfold at the global level.

Headlines are increasingly dominated by soaring oil and gas prices and market volatility. When the global economy is dependent on a centralised, combustible resource, missiles do more than just cut off power or disrupt shipping. They rock the very foundation of global stability.

When the global economy is dependent on a centralised, combustible resource, missiles do more than just cut off power or disrupt shipping. They rock the very foundation of global stability.

The current crisis is a tragic, undeniable argument for why we must accelerate the transition to Renewable Energy.

Renewables for resilience, independence and defence

Action in Bulgaria for 100 Percent Renewable Energy. © Boris Dimitrov / Greenpeace
Activists unfurled a giant banner outside the Bulgarian National Palace of Culture reading "Our Sun. Our Power. Our Future." They called on the European energy ministers to recognize the rights of citizens and communities to produce and share their own energy (April 2018).
© Boris Dimitrov / Greenpeace

This isn't just about carbon emissions or climate targets. It's about resilience, security, and survival.

Here is why a decentralised, renewable-led transition is a path toward vital protection and economic security:

  1. Strengthening the grid: You cannot "blow up" the sun. It is incredibly difficult to disable a decentralised network of millions of rooftop solar panels. Distributed energy is inherently more resilient to sabotage than a handful of massive, vulnerable thermal plants.
  2. Ending energy dependency: Conflict brings blockades and supply chain collapses. A country that produces its own power from its own sun and wind cannot be held hostage by disrupted shipping lanes or volatile oil markets.
  3. Economic sovereignty: As prices soar, nations relying on imported fuels face crippling inflation. Transitioning to local renewables acts as a "hedge" against war driven shocks, keeping costs predictable for families when they are most vulnerable.
  4. Decentralisation as defence: By removing "single points of failure", we ensure that hospitals, schools, and homes can maintain power even if the national grid is compromised.

Not just energy goal but security imperative

We've long advocated for energy sovereignty, but the current situation proves this isn't a "green" luxury. It is a strategic necessity.

Break Free Go Solar Human Banner in Casablanca. © Azeddine Tedjini / Medina Street / Greenpeace
People formed a giant human banner in front of the Hassan II Mosque and Casablanca International Fair in Casablanca, Morocco with the message "Break Free – go solar", as part of the global "Break Free" movement promoting renewable energies (March 2018).
© Azeddine Tedjini / Medina Street / Greenpeace

The transition to renewables is often framed as a climate goal. But in a region where stability is fragile, it is also a security imperative.

We need to build energy systems that are as resilient as the people who rely on them. Renewables are the best (and much needed) way to make that happen.

Climate Justice Camp in Lebanon. © Pamela EA / Greenpeace
Climate Justice Camp in Lebanon (August 2023) led by climate groups across the Middle East and North Africa, and attended by youth organisers and mobilisers from almost 100 countries.
© Pamela EA / Greenpeace

Julien Jreissati is Programme Director at Greenpeace Middle East and North Africa, based in Lebanon.

Massive Drought in Romania. © Mihai Militaru / Greenpeace

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