Embracing Disruption
Energizing autonomy: Europe’s new power play
Europe has entered a moment in which sovereignty is no longer a lofty political ideal but a pressing strategic imperative. The continent’s vulnerability was laid bare in 2022 when Russia’s full scale invasion of Ukraine exposed how decades of reliance on imported fossil fuels – especially natural gas – could swiftly turn into economic fragility. At the peak, Russian gas accounted for nearly 50% of EU gas imports, a share that has since fallen to around 12%, but the shock revealed how precarious such dependence can be. Price spikes, inflationary pressures, and industrial uncertainty spread across the continent.
At the same time, ongoing instability in the Middle East continues to highlight how sensitive global energy corridors remain, while strategic rivalry between the US and China reinforces the risks of concentrating supply chains for critical technologies in a handful of external actors. Against this backdrop, Europe’s energy transition has evolved from primarily an environmental agenda into a core pillar of strategic autonomy. The uncomfortable truth is now unmistakable: without a secure, resilient, and domestically anchored energy system, Europe’s ambitions for economic independence and competitiveness cannot be realized.
Energy sovereignty: a core pillar of strategic autonomy
Europe has made notable progress in transforming its electricity system over the past decade, with 2023 marking the first year in which renewable energy sources surpassed fossil fuels in EU power generation. Wind now contributes around 20% of electricity, solar roughly 10%, hydropower about 11%, while nuclear provides a stable share of around 24%. In total, renewables supply approximately 46% of Europe’s electricity, signaling a meaningful shift toward a cleaner and more resilient energy mix. Yet electricity represents only part of Europe’s broader energy landscape. When examining final energy consumption – which includes heating, transport, and industrial demand – fossil fuels still dominate. Oil accounts for about 35% of total energy use, gas for roughly 23%, and coal for around 11%, while renewables make up only about 23%. This means that fossil fuels still supply close to 70% of Europe’s overall energy needs, underscoring the urgency of accelerating electrification across harder‑to‑decarbonize sectors such as mobility, buildings, and heavy industry.
So while Europe has made significant progress in reducing emissions and dependence on fossil fuels, decarbonization does not equate to sovereignty per se. Achieving strategic autonomy means controlling the underlying energy value chain. Of course, renewables provide an opportunity to reduce exposure to global fuel markets, but this will still lead to a reliance on international suppliers for solar panels, batteries, and other components, as well as the critical minerals that underpin green manufacturing.
Energy sovereignty thus means securing domestic production capacity, strengthening supply chains, and ensuring the resilience of generation, distribution, and storage systems. By reducing vulnerability to external pressures, Europe can build a more resilient economic base – one capable of supporting long term growth, powering the AI revolution, and, crucially, maintaining geopolitical flexibility in an increasingly uncertain world.
Of course, the road to energy sovereignty will not be without its difficulties and Europe faces several structural hurdles.
First, the continent has underinvested in critical infrastructure for decades. Electricity grids lack the capacity and flexibility required for a renewables heavy system; storage remains insufficient; and cross border connections lacking. Second, regulatory fragmentation continues to hinder progress. Approvals for new energy projects remain slow and complex, while divergent national frameworks create uncertainty for investors and slow the scaling of new technologies. The EU’s Industrial Accelerator Act, presented on February 25th 2026, recognizes this problem and aims to simplify the authorization procedures for infrastructure projects and high-energy-intensity industries.
Growing policy momentum
Europe has recently taken a decisive policy shift toward strengthening energy autonomy. For instance, Fit for 55 has tightened emissions targets, expanding carbon pricing, and supporting the rollout of electric vehicles, heat pumps, and clean industrial technologies essential for cutting fossil‑fuel use. RePowerEU, launched in 2022, then set out a three‑pillar response focused on reducing energy demand, diversifying gas supplies through new LNG capacity and alternative pipeline agreements, and accelerating renewable deployment by streamlining permitting processes. It also raised the EU’s 2030 renewable energy target to 45% of the total energy mix.
Meanwhile, the 2023 Net Zero Industry Act (NZIA) has added an industrial dimension by aiming European production of at least 40% of key clean‑tech components – such as solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, heat pumps, electrolyzers, and carbon‑capture equipment – by 2030. And, alongside this, the EU Hydrogen Strategy is targeting 10 million tonnes of both domestic renewable hydrogen production and imports by 2030, supported by the European Hydrogen Bank to stimulate market creation.
The strategic role of innovation
Innovation will be the linchpin of Europe’s shift toward energy sovereignty. Emerging technologies – notably in hydrogen, and carbon capture and storage – will enable solutions for sectors where direct electrification is difficult, such as steel production, while innovation in areas such as smart grids, energy management software, digital sensors, and AI enabled optimization will strengthen the reliability of energy systems and allow for the greater penetration of renewables. Battery storage technologies will also play a decisive role in balancing a renewables-based system and mitigating intermittency.
However, established players among Europe’s utilities and infrastructure providers will remain the operational backbone of the continent’s journey toward energy independence. Large scale grid expansion is essential for integrating renewable energy, connecting new industrial sites, and strengthening resilience against supply disruptions. And utilities are at the forefront of deploying wind and solar capacity, upgrading networks, and rolling out smart metering and digital tools to increase efficiency, while Europe will also need to scale domestic manufacturing for critical components such as turbines, substations, high voltage cables, and grid balancing equipment.
Energy sovereignty as opportunity
Europe’s pursuit of strategic autonomy is inseparable from its ability to secure, produce, and control its own energy resources. The geopolitical shocks of recent years have crystallized the importance of reducing reliance on external suppliers and building a resilient, homegrown energy ecosystem. Achieving this requires significant investment in infrastructure, innovation, supply chain development, and industrial capacity — but the result will be a more stable, competitive, and sovereign Europe.
For investors, the European energy ecosystem could offer a blend of stable cash flow opportunities and high growth innovation. Utilities and grid operators deliver resilience and long term visibility, supported by regulated business models and essential infrastructure expansion. Meanwhile, green technology manufacturers, hydrogen developers, storage innovators, and digital energy platforms offer exposure to technological breakthroughs and scalable decarbonization solutions.
Companies that combine the scale to underpin Europe’s critical energy infrastructure with the innovation to reshape it stand at the intersection of policy support, structural demand, and long‑term capital deployment. This is creating a powerful opportunity for investors to participate in Europe’s drive toward energy sovereignty while capturing durable growth and resilient returns.