European government officials are warning that a “difficult winter” is ahead. Belgium’s Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, a Young Global Leader of the World Economic Forum (WEF), has stated that this winter and the coming winters will be challenging. He warned that the country faces long-term economic hardship due to soaring energy costs.
“The next five to ten winters will be difficult,” said De Croo at port company ICO Terminals in Zeebrugge. “We are monitoring the situation closely, but we must be clear: the next few months will be difficult, and the next winters will be difficult. We will have to get out of it, hoping for the best while preparing for the worst.
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Following De Croo, French President Emmanuel Macron, a WEF Young Global Leader and former Rothschild banker warned of a brutal winter and other problems ahead. “Perhaps this is the end of an era of plenty,” he said ominously.
“Our country is at a turning point. It’s going to be a difficult winter,” Macron said at his government’s first meeting after the summer break. “This could be the end of an era of abundance. From a plethora of technical products that always seemed to be available. Of wealth on land and water”.
The Spanish government also warned of bad times. “We don’t know what kind of winter is coming. The winter will be very harsh,” Secretary of Defense Margarita Robles said in an interview with radio station NRE.
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