The following is a guest article by Dr. Matthew Wielicki
A quarter-century of promises
It’s November 2025. We are exactly a quarter century removed from the millennial panic, the Kyoto Protocol hype, and the first waves of “irrevocable tipping points” that were supposedly coming in 10 years (i.e., 2010).
We were told that fossil fuels had to be phased out immediately, or the planet would warm by 5–6°C by 2100. 25 years, multiple trillions of dollars, millions of wind turbines and solar panels, and countless “last chance” climate summits later…
Fossil fuels supplied ~88% of global primary energy in 2000.
In 2024, they supplied 86%.
Let that sink in.

After a quarter century of the most expensive industrial policy in human history, the share of fossil fuels in global energy has declined by a whopping 2 percentage points.
The “energy transition” is a joke. Net Zero is delusional.
And the original justification, catastrophic 5°C warming, has quietly been abandoned even by the IPCC’s own models (now closer to 2–2.5°C, maybe 3°C in the very highest scenarios that nobody actually expects).
The gentle warming we’ve experienced (≈1.3°C since pre-industrial) has coincided with:
- Record crop yields
- Exploding global greening (14% more green leaf area since 1980s, thanks CO₂)
- No detectable increase in normalized disaster losses (EM-DAT data)
- Record low climate-related deaths (down 98% since 1920s)
I wrote about the disaster myth here if you want the receipts:
The Myth of Increasing Disasters
The Energy Institute’s annual scoreboard
But the new Energy Institute (EI) 2025 Statistical Review (data through 2024) is brutal for the narrative. Global energy demand hit another all-time high… Fossil fuel consumption hit another all-time high… CO₂ emissions hit another all-time high.
Wind + solar grew by a record amount… and still only supplies ~6% of primary energy. The “transition” isn’t displacing fossil fuels; it’s just adding on top to meet Asia’s insatiable demand for cheap, reliable energy.
The EI Statistical Review is the global energy scoreboard, published annually since 1952 and now in its third year under the Energy Institute’s custodianship. EI is a pro-net-zero professional body, not a skeptical shop, which makes their own framing this year especially revealing: they describe today’s world as a period of “energy addition,” where renewables grow fast but alongside record highs in coal, oil, and gas.
However, countries that bet heaviest on unreliables are paying the price. Remember the April 28, 2025 Iberian Peninsula blackout? Spain and Portugal — Europe’s poster children for “renewable leadership” (≈50% wind+solar in electricity on good days) — suffered the continent’s largest blackout in decades.
No storm. No heatwave. No cyberattack. Just too much intermittent generation, not enough inertia, and grid operators lost control in seconds. Millions in the dark, airports shut, hospitals on generators, trains stopped. I covered it here:
Spain & Portugal Blackout – A Warning from the Future of Energy
While we subsidise our solar panels into existence with coal-fired factories, China started construction on 94.5 GW of new coal plants in 2024, the highest level in a decade. They commissioned another 30.5 GW.

They now burn more coal than the rest of the world combined, export the green tech, keep prices low, and watch the West deindustrialise itself. I wrote the definitive thread on this:
China’s Coal Paradox: Driving Renewables Abroad While Burning Coal at Home
Oh, and in case you thought this was “market-driven,” solar got 205× more federal subsidies per unit of energy produced in the US (2010–2019) than oil and gas.

The 2025 Energy Institute review is 76 pages of charts that all tell the same story:
The era of fossil fuels is not ending. It’s barely even bending.
Want to see the actual numbers, the embarrassing wind/solar primary energy shares, the record energy growth, and why your electricity bill is about to go parabolic if we keep this up?
This piece originally appeared at IrrationalFear.substack.com and has been republished here with permission.


