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Agency official says Europe's 'energy subtraction' policies have hurt growth, sent industries abroad
Summary
The speaker criticized what he called 'energy subtraction' and 'overwrought climate alarmism' in Western Europe, asserting those policies reduced energy production, curtailed economic growth and encouraged relocation of energy‑intensive industries to Asia; the transcript contains no immediate rebuttal or documentary evidence.
An agency official sharply criticized certain Western European energy policies during remarks focused on Central and Eastern Europe, saying restrictive measures have reduced energy production and driven critical industries overseas.
"We have been concerned, and I've been very outspoken long before I came into government, that the energy subtraction policies overwrought climate alarmism that has just stopped the growth and, in fact, shrunk the energy production in most of the Western European nations," the official said. He added that such policies "exported so many of their critical industries abroad to Asia."
The official framed this argument as a policy critique tied to his view that the Three Seas nations represent an alternative path for investment and manufacturing. He argued that transferring energy‑intensive production to middle‑income nations can worsen environmental outcomes because those nations "by nature of their status are much less concerned about the environment," a claim he presented as a consequence of relocation.
The transcript records these as the official's assertions; it does not include empirical data, named studies, or responses from Western European officials in this session. As such, the claims remain the speaker's allegations and are unresolved by this record.
Why it matters: If true, the described policy effects could reshape industrial geography and environmental outcomes. The official's remarks suggest U.S. attention to comparative energy and industrial strategies in Europe.
The official closed his prepared remarks and invited questions; the transcript does not record a challenge or verification of his assertions during this session.

