Published Saturday, 25 April 2009
Irish Environment Minister and Green Party leader John Gormley said different conditions in different parts of Europe - and even North Africa - could provide energy to a potential market of 500 million people.
A Europe-wide link up could solve the problems of uncertainty of supply from sources such as wind and wave power.
He said: "With imagination, vision, determination - and with Europe's help - our energy could be made up of solar energy from Seville, tidal power from Rathlin island and Torr Head; geothermal power from Reykjavik; hydro electric electricity from Norway; wind power from Denmark; wave power from the Kerry coast and biomass crops from Germany."
Taking his inspiration from President Obama's Jobs and the Green New Deal, he added: "An energy super grid is one element that could advance the Green New Deal - a proposal to create 'green collar jobs' for five million Europeans by mobilising 500 million euro of private and public investment over the next five years."
Addressing the Greens' Northern Ireland annual conference in Belfast he said in that new economy Northern Ireland was uniquely placed - not least in terms of its abundant renewable, and especially wind and marine, energy supplies.
"With the right political, business, union and environmental leadership and partnership, it could become a green economy leader," said Mr Gormley.
The Greens' sole Stormont Assembly member used the conference to criticise Northern Ireland's Environment Minister Sammy Wilson.
Mr Wilson is an outspoken sceptic of the argument that climate change is man made and Green MLA Brian Wilson questioned how with his opinions, he could be tasked with implementing the Climate Change Act.
The minister recently censored a UK government made "Act on CO2" advertisement in Northern Ireland, something which Brian Wilson said had made Northern Ireland look "ridiculous throughout the world."