Back to homeLearn English hub

Science | Europe

European Energy Transition: Onshore Wind Permitting Crisis Threatens 2030 Targets

2026-03-28| 1 min read| Recovered Live Archive

Despite record offshore wind capacity, onshore wind development across Europe is being hampered by permitting delays averaging 7-10 years that jeopardise 2030 renewable energy targets.

Learn English: Vocabulary + AudioEstimated level: C1 (advanced reader)
Key vocabulary
Energy: a key term used in this report
Permitting: a key term used in this report
renewable: a key term used in this report
development: a key term used in this report
Onshore: a key term used in this report
Transition: a key term used in this report
Targets: a key term used in this report
Ambition: a key term used in this report

Europe's Wind Power Paradox: Record Ambition, Record Permitting Delays

Europe's renewable energy sector faces a paradox that is becoming more acute with each passing month: public and political ambition for rapid expansion of wind and solar capacity is higher than ever, driven by energy security concerns following the Iran war and climate commitments under the European Green Deal, but the actual process of getting new projects built is mired in permitting delays and planning obstacles that routinely extend project development timelines to seven, eight, or even ten years. The gap between ambition and delivery is particularly acute for onshore wind, where local opposition, environmental assessment requirements, and fragmented national and regional permitting procedures combine to make Europe's planning system one of the most challenging environments in the world for renewable energy development.

The European Commission recognised this problem explicitly in the emergency regulation adopted after Russia's energy weaponisation in 2022, which classified renewable energy deployment as an overriding public interest and required member states to expedite permitting for solar and wind projects. Progress has been made in some countries — Germany has streamlined some federal procedures, Spain has pre-designated suitable areas for renewable development, and Denmark has concentrated permitting authority to reduce the number of approvals required. But in many member states, the multiple layers of national, regional, and local approval — plus environmental impact assessments, grid connection agreements, and community consultation processes — continue to combine into timelines incompatible with the speed of energy transition that climate and energy security goals demand.

Learn English: Practice Questions
Gap-fill practice

Despite record offshore wind capacity, onshore wind development across Europe is being hampered by ____2____ delays averaging 7-10 years that jeopardise 2030 ____3____ ____1____ targets.

Quick comprehension check

What is the main focus of this article?

#wind-energy#permitting#eu#renewable#2030#targets

Comments

0 comments
Checking account...
480 characters left
Loading comments...

Related coverage

Science
European Renewable Energy Record Despite Iran Crisis: Wind and Solar Cover 35% of Demand
Even as gas prices rocket, European wind and solar generation is setting new records and demonstrating the strategic val...
Science
European Commission Launches Global Health Security Initiative
A new EU Global Health Resilience Initiative calls for evidence on strengthening Europe's capacity to prevent and respon...
Science
Energy Transition Under Fire: Can Europe Still Afford to Go Green?
European green transition and energy crisis coexistence 2026...
Science
EU Soil Monitoring Law: Expert Group Holds First Meeting as Regulation Takes Effect
The first meeting of the EU Member States Expert Group on the Soil Monitoring Law took place March 26, beginning the imp...
Economy
European Gas Storage Emergency: Commission Proposes Lower Targets Due to Iran War
The European Commission formally proposes steps to reduce energy demand and urges member states to lower gas storage tar...
Economy
Spain's VAT Cut on Energy: Half Measure or Smart Policy in a Crisis?
Madrid's decision to halve VAT on most energy sources has cushioned Spanish inflation compared to EU neighbours but come...

More stories

World
Where Is Iran? A Simple Geography Lesson
World
The Diplomacy of Delay: What Happens on April 6?
Weather
Can We Predict the Weather? Climate vs Weather
Military
The F-14 Paradox: Iran's American Air Force
World
How to Say the Date and Time in English
Sports
Football's Migrant Narrative: How Kosovo's Players Carry Multiple Identities
World
Writing About the News: How to Use the Past Passive
World
Countries and Their Languages: Europe
World
Speaking About Feelings: The War in Ukraine
World
The European Parliament: Democracy's Most Productive and Least Understood Institution
Weather
Extreme Weather and Climate Change: Making the Connection
World
My Week in English: The News This Week