“Denmark has taken over the EU presidency, and the first thing it does is speed up the Green Deal. Not the migration crisis, not the threat of war with Russia, not youth unemployment, not the declining competitiveness of the European economy. For Denmark, the most important thing is still the ‘green goodies.’ Because this has never been about the climate. It’s business — or rather, a massive scam!” wrote PiS MP Zbigniew Ziobro on the X platform.
Denmark Announces Plans to “Double Efforts to Implement the Green Deal”
Denmark assumed the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union on July 1, taking over from Poland. During a session of the Polish parliamentary committees, Denmark’s ambassador Jakob Henningsen stated that his country, during its presidency lasting through the end of this year, plans to accelerate the process of green transformation and intends to “double efforts to implement the Green Deal.”
PiS MP Zbigniew Ziobro responded to this announcement in a post published on X.
“Denmark has taken over the EU presidency, and the first thing it does is speed up the Green Deal. Not the migration crisis, not the threat of war with Russia, not youth unemployment, not the declining competitiveness of the European economy — even though it is precisely this ‘green madness’ and further layers of EU bureaucracy that are driving us straight into these problems. For Denmark, however, the priority is still the ‘green goodies.’ Because this has never been about the climate. It’s business — or rather, a massive scam!” wrote the politician.
He added that “Denmark, along with other slick operators, is raking in a fortune from the production of wind turbines and the export of ‘green’ energy. Energy cheaper than that generated from coal — but only because coal is burdened with massive extortion payments in the form of CO₂ emission taxes.”
“Let’s throw the Green Deal into the trash, along with the mafia-like ETS fees and carbon footprint nonsense, and we will have the cheapest and most reliable electricity in Europe. Denmark and Germany — with their unstable and outrageously expensive eco-energy — will be good for little more than lighting up mosques,” he declared.