What do supermarkets and energy systems have in common?

What do supermarkets and energy systems have in common

Have you ever thought about how we choose groceries? We need everything — vegetables, meat, fish, milk, bread, candy for the kids, and flowers for our partner. The key is: we have options.

Now imagine walking into a supermarket… and half the shelves are empty.
Or worse — you’re told: “Everything else is banned. Take only this one item.”
Sounds ridiculous?

But that’s exactly where modern energy policy might be taking us. Today, we heat our homes with kerosene, heat pumps, liquefied gas, electricity, and for some — a cozy fire in the fireplace.

There’s diversity. And that’s a good thing.

But the direction many governments are taking — especially across Europe — is clear:

Electricity is the only future. Everything else is being phased out: outdated, polluting, not “green enough”. And the goal seems noble: climate protection, sustainability, clean tech.

But here’s the twist. Over the last four years, electricity prices in Ireland have increased by 12–18% annually. Yes, the government has stepped in: €600 compensation in 2022, €450 in 2023. But let’s be honest – this support won’t last forever.

So what happens when you no longer have a choice?

When gas stoves are banned, and the only way to cook or heat is through a rising electricity bill? It’s not energy freedom. It’s energy dependency. Instead of a green energy future full of comfort and savings, we risk creating a green dictatorship —
where choices are removed rather than offered.

But there is an alternative

We need solutions that are not just green — but practical, efficient, and truly affordable. Like the Mechanical Heat Pump I’ve developed, which, based on calculations, is 42% more efficient than any wind turbine.

Or the idea of Mechanical Air Conditioners — ideal for hot countries like the UAE — using industrial wind instead of electricity to cool air or water in high-rise buildings.
The less we depend on centralized systems,
the more freedom we have.