Windfall taxes in Europe would hit renewables investment
Ad hoc interventions by governments would create regulatory uncertainty and deter investors, say energy firms
Short-term government interventions such as the imposition of windfall taxes to cushion the impact on consumers of rising energy prices could drive investment in renewables away from Europe and slow the region’s transition, according to energy industry executives speaking at the Financial Times Commodities Global Summit this week. The European Commission is expected to back the use of windfall taxes on energy companies to raise funds as part of its response to the energy crisis which has deepened since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February. But ad hoc interventions would create regulatory uncertainty and encourage investors to focus on other regions when planning long-term investment in w

Also in this section
14 May 2025
Deal with Calpine shows oil and gas major ExxonMobil has no intention of curbing its CCS ambitions, despite US policy risks and broader scepticism over the energy transition
13 May 2025
Volatile tariffs add new risks for a sector already struggling to achieve economies of scale
30 April 2025
State administrations are using a flawed metric to justify green energy projects
29 April 2025
Spain’s unprecedented blackout highlighted the risk for green hydrogen producers with exposure to Europe’s creaking power grids