There are plenty of forces trying to slow the transition to zero emissions. Populists, protectionists, fossil-fuel lobbies, to name a few. But one of the biggest threats isn’t political, but physical.
In 2024, global energy demand jumped 2.2% , well above the decade’s average, according to the International Energy Agency. The reason wasn’t economic growth; it was heat. Record-breaking temperatures drove people to turn on air conditioners, strained power grids, and reminded us that our infrastructure was built for a cooler world.
That’s the strange paradox of this moment. The more we heat the planet, the harder it becomes to cool it down. Every wildfire that takes down a transmission line, every flood that swallows a road, every heatwave that makes a solar farm falter all slow the very

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