9 May 2022

King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden led a high-level delegation of officials, academics, and business leaders on a visit to the IEA’s headquarters in Paris where they discussed the emerging global energy crisis and the importance of clean energy technologies with IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol and other senior figures from the Agency.

The King’s visit was part of the Royal Technology Mission organised by the Swedish Sovereign and the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences. The visit to France and Germany is on the theme of energy transitions and digitalization, focusing on the research and development of new technologies.

Attendees in the delegation 

The 40-person delegation visiting the IEA was led jointly by the King and the Academy’s Chair, Marcus Wallenberg. It included Academy President Tuula Teeri, Ambassador to France Hakan Akesson, Vattenfall CEO Anna Borg, ABB Sweden CEO Dennis Helfridsson, Northvolt CEO Peter Carlsson, Polestar CEO Dennis Nobelius, and Robert Andrén, Director General of the Swedish Energy Agency.

The delegation also included the Vice-Chancellors of Linnaeus University and Umea University and the President of the Chalmers University of Technology.

Addressing global energy

Dr. Birol delivered a speech on global energy markets, clean energy transition, and implications for economies

After introductory remarks by Mr. Wallenberg, Dr. Birol delivered a speech on global energy markets, the clean energy transition, and the implications for economies, geopolitics, and technology, which was followed by an open discussion.

Sébastien Treyer, Executive Director of the Paris-based policy research institute IDDRI, then gave a presentation on French industrial policy.

Key IEA activities 

Alain Bécoulet, Head of Engineering at the ITER project, spoke about nuclear fusion. After the larger discussion, King Carl XVI Gustaf, Mr. Wallenberg, and Dr. Birol had a brief meeting during which Dr. Birol thanked the King for awarding him Sweden’s Order of the Polar Star in 2013.

Sweden has been a member of the IEA since the Agency’s founding in 1974. The Swedish government’s recent involvement in key IEA activities includes chairing the 2017 IEA Ministerial Meeting.