16 November 2022

Claire Smith

Claire joined Beyond Fossil Fuels in November 2022 as an International Campaigner. She previously worked for the Australian Government and UK Government, focusing on strategy development, strategic communications campaigning, and international partnership building across a wide range of policy issues, including climate change, clean energy transition, and international aid.

Claire holds a Bachelor’s degree in International Relations, a Master’s degree in Strategic Communications, and has a keen interest in applying behavioural science communications to advance the global energy transition and respond more effectively to climate disasters.

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25 November 2025

Spain quietly reached a historic milestone this summer: for a record 74 days between 3 July and 16 September, the country’s power system operated entirely without coal. With coal accounting for less than 1% of Spain’s electricity generation this year, it’s a clear sign that the country is on the brink of completing a full coal phase-out.

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18 November 2025

Distribution grids need to transition from a network where households and businesses passively consume electricity generated principally from centralised thermal power plants – to a system where electricity is generated and consumed in a much more decentralised, flexible manner. This transformation redefines the role of DSOs. Their new role as the key enablers, innovators and investors for the energy transition necessarily implies that current governance and operational structures need overhauling. Our new report sets out high-level changes needed to transform DSOs into the enablers of the clean energy transition.

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06 November 2025

Türkiye’s Ministry of Energy’s recent announcement about turning former coal mining sites into solar fields is a promising but cautious step toward a cleaner future. On paper, it signals a shift away from costly, polluting fossil fuels, something Türkiye urgently needs to plan for. But the true test will be in how this transformation is implemented, and who truly benefits from it.

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28 October 2025

A growing risk is that billions of euros in energy subsidies are being handed to fossil fuel companies, including EP Group, ENEL and RWE [6], paid for through levies on household and industrial energy bills, while proven clean and flexible technologies are pushed out of the market.