On the subject of changeing energy transition.
After doing a quick search on the net I now know that:
France, where the entire energy sector is owned by the state is making a nonliberterian transition based on goverment reforms only.
Germany where several companies supply energy is making an effort through giving massive subsidation and giving goverment handouts with demanding transparecy and results (laws set but work done by companies)
Denmark makes a similiar approach like Germany with the difference of focusing on small buisnesses and not giving any subsidations to big corporations, aswell as danish buisnesses only (Denmark has the most transparent goverment in the world, where almoust every information goverment action is accessable by the public)
What they all have in common is, that the goals set are to reach a certain ammount of green energy by 2020-2040. (I havent found a single liberterian only approach to this problem, so I guess it has been put of the table as an option by most). And since the US is a bt far behind on this issue, they have the benefit of looking at Europe later, and taking over the concept which has worked best.
After doing a quick search on the net I now know that:
France, where the entire energy sector is owned by the state is making a nonliberterian transition based on goverment reforms only.
Germany where several companies supply energy is making an effort through giving massive subsidation and giving goverment handouts with demanding transparecy and results (laws set but work done by companies)
Denmark makes a similiar approach like Germany with the difference of focusing on small buisnesses and not giving any subsidations to big corporations, aswell as danish buisnesses only (Denmark has the most transparent goverment in the world, where almoust every information goverment action is accessable by the public)
What they all have in common is, that the goals set are to reach a certain ammount of green energy by 2020-2040. (I havent found a single liberterian only approach to this problem, so I guess it has been put of the table as an option by most). And since the US is a bt far behind on this issue, they have the benefit of looking at Europe later, and taking over the concept which has worked best.