Interview

Dr. Robert Habeck: Decisive Climate Action as Answer to Uncertainty at ESG Summit

At the ESG Summit 2025, Markus A.W. Hoehner interviews Dr. Robert Habeck on the value of the European Sustainability Week as a platform. They discuss how fostering solidarity and decisive climate action are crucial to overcoming the pervasive uncertainty in current times, advocating for shared responsibility.

Event
ESG Summit 2025
MarketSegmentTechnology
Format
Interviewer · EUPD Group
Markus A.W. Hoehner
CEO & Founder · EUPD Group
Guest ·
Dr. Robert Habeck
Vice-Chancellor and Federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Climate Protection (2021-2025) Federal Chairman of Bündnis 90/Die Grünen (2018-2022) ·
InterviewESG Summit 2025 · Petersberg near Bonn
03:08
Filmed on site · No editorial direction beyond question set · Captions auto-generated, reviewed by EUPD Research

Key takeaways

4 points · 03:08 video
  1. Discussion Platforms Counter Uncertainty
    Forums like the European Sustainability Week are valuable because they foster solidarity and allow for analysis and outlining future perspectives, which directly counteract feelings of uncertainty and isolation.
  2. Balancing Information Through Exchange
    Collaborative settings help overcome 'information imbalance' by enabling balanced discussions, the exchange of learnings, and collective planning of next steps to manage complex situations.
  3. Decisive Action in Sustainability
    Despite global challenges, clear European and German answers in sustainability and climate action, including electrification and new technologies, provide a definite path out of current dangerous situations.
  4. Responsibility as Uncertainty's Counterpart
    Much uncertainty is self-inflicted, arising from a reluctance to take responsibility for decisions. Decisive leadership and a commitment to responsibility are crucial for competitiveness and growth.

The Role of Collaborative Platforms in Addressing Uncertainty

Markus A.W. Hoehner initiated the discussion by asking Dr. Robert Habeck about the European Sustainability Week's value as a platform during times of global transformation. Dr. Habeck identified pervasive uncertainty as an interconnected feeling of being alone, not making a difference, and lacking clear understanding of events. He elaborated that gathering and discussing issues, particularly with like-minded individuals, is crucial for fostering solidarity and overcoming this uncertainty. Such discussions enable participants to analyze situations, exchange learnings, and collectively outline perspectives for the future. This process directly addresses information imbalance, facilitating the collaborative development of next steps to manage existing uncertainties.

"Helps creating solidarity, helps creating, um, overcoming uncertainty actually..." Habeck · 00:58

Decisive Climate Action and Responsibility as Solutions

Dr. Habeck challenged the premise that all current uncertainty is externally imposed, stating that a significant portion is 'self-inflicted.' While acknowledging global challenges, he asserted that clear European and German answers in sustainability and climate action, particularly through electrification and new technologies, offer a direct path out of dangerous situations. He linked this decisive approach to fostering competitiveness and growth, suggesting there is no inherent need for prolonged uncertainty but rather a need for decisiveness. Dr. Habeck concluded by positing that if uncertainty stems from a reluctance of leaders to take responsibility for their decisions, then responsibility itself is the necessary counterpart to uncertainty, calling for more of it in governance.

"So maybe the counterpart of uncertainty is responsibility and we need more of this." Habeck · 02:42

Two questions on the stand

Chapters · click to jump
00:13
The Platform's Role in Times of Transformation
Markus A.W. Hoehner asks Dr. Robert Habeck about the value of the European Sustainability Week as a platform during periods of transformation.
00:26
Overcoming Uncertainty Through Dialogue
Dr. Robert Habeck explains how gathering and discussing with others helps create solidarity, overcome feelings of isolation, and balance information to manage uncertainty.
02:17
Decisive Climate Action and Responsibility
Habeck argues that much uncertainty is self-inflicted, emphasizing that clear European answers in sustainability and climate action, coupled with responsibility, are crucial for future competitiveness and growth.

Interview transcript

Auto-generated · reviewed · ~3 min read
Robert, thank you for the interesting, uh, session. Um, with the guys we just conducted, what makes, uh, the European Sustainability Week valuable as a platform in these times of the transformation? So we had a discussion about the price of, uh, the cost of uncertainty and uncertainty. From my understanding, this is an overall observation, is interconnected with being alone, the feeling of not making a difference, of just reading everything and not getting any chance of understanding what's it's, what is really meaning and getting together, discussing it with people. Sometimes like-minded people, of course, also not like-minded people, but this is more like-minded people. Helps creating solidarity, helps creating, um, overcoming uncertainty actually, and I think this, I experienced now live on stage at your discussion because we, we, we could analyze things, we can, we could discuss it and then maybe outline the perspective for the future. And perspective for the future is the opposite of uncertainty. And I think, um, we are suffering basically from information, uh, imbalance. But here we can balance, yeah, we can talk, we can exchange learnings, um, we can talk about next steps, uh, to, to manage this uncertainty that has to, was, was there always basically, Well, for me, lots of this uncertainty are self-inflicted. So yes, of course we're living in troubled times with Putin and Russia and Trump in US and the war in Ukraine still ongoing and all this rise of author terrorism. But the answers should be very clear. The European answers, the German answers should be very clear in this field of sustainability and climate action, electrifying and using the new technology. That is, that is, that is the, the way coming out of these, these dangerous situation we're in. And this is also the way for competitiveness and for growth, like the drug report, uh said. So there's not really a need for uncertainty. There are problems of course, but actually we could be more decisive. And if uncertainty means that people are politicians, leaders are uncertain if all their decisions would come to good results, well this is then, this is not, this is not an objective problem. This has something to do with being ready to take responsibility. So maybe the counterpart of uncertainty is responsibility and we need more of this. Yeah. Thank you very much. Uh, robot, thanks for being with us. It's a pleasure and changing information, all these chats and hope to see you soon again. Thanks. Thanks. Thank You very much. Bye.
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Frequently asked questions

Dr. Habeck states that such platforms offer a space for people to gather and discuss issues, which counters the feeling of isolation and lack of understanding that contributes to uncertainty. This collaboration fosters solidarity and provides a perspective for the future, which is the opposite of uncertainty.

According to Dr. Habeck, discussions enable the analysis of situations, the exchange of learnings, and the outlining of future perspectives. This process helps to balance information, allowing participants to collaboratively identify next steps and manage prevailing uncertainties.

No, Dr. Habeck asserts that a significant portion of current uncertainty is ‘self-inflicted.’ While acknowledging global issues, he argues that European countries possess the means to provide clear answers through decisive sustainability and climate action.

Dr. Habeck emphasizes clear European and German answers in sustainability and climate action, specifically mentioning electrifying and utilizing new technology. He views these actions as the path to navigate dangerous situations, ensure competitiveness, and foster growth.

Dr. Habeck identifies responsibility as the direct counterpart to uncertainty. He suggests that if leaders’ uncertainty stems from a reluctance to take responsibility for decisions, it highlights a need for greater willingness to act decisively.