The age of fossil fuels is ending.
Oil is yesterday’s energy.
Renewables will soon power the world.
Politicians repeat it. Activists chant it. Much of the media reports it as settled fact.
And then reality intrudes.
This week, as tensions in the Middle East erupted into open conflict involving Iran, global markets reacted instantly. Oil prices surged. Energy stocks jumped. Shipping insurance rates spiked. Stock markets wobbled.
Why?
Because the entire modern world still runs on oil.
Not partially. Not occasionally.
Completely.
The World Still Runs on Fossil Fuels
Despite decades of promises about a rapid transition to green energy, the global economy remains overwhelmingly dependent on fossil fuels.
Oil powers transportation.
Gas fuels electricity generation and industry.
Coal still produces vast amounts of power in developing nations.
Remove those fuels suddenly and modern civilisation would grind to a halt.
Planes don’t fly on solar panels.
Container ships don’t cross oceans on wind turbines.
Steel plants and cement kilns cannot run on good intentions.
The reaction of the markets to the Iran crisis tells us something the climate narrative prefers to ignore:
Oil is still the lifeblood of the global economy.
And it will remain so for decades.
The Renewable Revolution That Wasn’t
None of this is to deny that renewables are growing. Governments have poured trillions of dollars into solar panels, wind farms, subsidies, and mandates.
But after all that investment, fossil fuels still supply the vast majority of the world’s energy.
The uncomfortable truth is that renewables have not replaced fossil fuels.
In many places they have simply been added on top of them.
When the wind stops blowing or the sun sets, the grid still relies on gas, coal, or nuclear power to keep the lights on.
The result?
Higher energy costs.
Across Europe and parts of the developed world, electricity prices have surged as governments attempt to force the transition faster than technology and infrastructure allow.
And who suffers the most?
Not wealthy activists.
The poor.
The Hidden Cost to Developing Nations
The push to rapidly abandon fossil fuels has had another damaging consequence: it has made energy more expensive for the countries that can least afford it.
Developing nations desperately need reliable, affordable power to lift millions of people out of poverty.
Factories. Hospitals. Water treatment plants. Transport systems.
All require energy.
Yet international financial institutions and climate activists increasingly pressure these nations not to build fossil fuel infrastructure.
In effect, the richest countries in the world are telling the poorest:
"You cannot use the same energy sources we used to become wealthy."
It is a policy that borders on moral arrogance.
The Climate Debate Needs Some Honesty
The climate debate has become dominated by apocalyptic language and unrealistic timelines.
We are told the world must abandon fossil fuels within a decade or face catastrophe.
Yet every real-world signal tells a different story.
Energy demand continues to grow.
Oil consumption remains near record highs.
Natural gas demand is expanding.
Coal usage in Asia continues to rise.
Even the most optimistic projections show fossil fuels remaining a major part of the global energy mix for many decades.
Pretending otherwise does not change physics, economics, or engineering reality.
A More Realistic Path Forward
None of this means innovation should stop.
Cleaner technologies should continue to develop.
Renewables will play a growing role.
Energy efficiency should improve.
But decarbonising a global industrial civilisation is not a ten-year project.
It is likely a century-scale transformation.
Until then, the world must prioritise energy reliability, affordability, and economic development.
And that means acknowledging an obvious truth.
The Reality Check
Every time geopolitical tensions threaten oil supplies, markets panic.
Not because traders are foolish.
But because they understand something the climate debate often ignores.
The modern world still runs on fossil fuels.
Until someone invents a scalable, reliable, affordable alternative capable of replacing them completely, that reality is not going away.
The sooner policymakers admit it, the sooner we can begin having an honest conversation about the future of energy.
And about how to manage climate risks without crippling the very economies that keep the world running.

