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A costly winter looms. How much will the West be willing to sacrifice?

This tiny hamlet of 1,400 in northern France is shrouded in silence by 9 p.m. on winter nights. At that hour, most residents are putting their children to bed or settling on the couch after a hard day’s work. 

But not Rémi Pantalacci. 

These days he is just clocking in, walking through the bamboo-lined entrance of Pocheco, an eco-friendly envelope manufacturer established here in 1928. In October, his boss asked production staffers if they would be willing to switch to the night shift in order to cut costs for the company, as energy prices have soared across Europe. Mr. Pantalacci immediately raised his hand.

Why We Wrote This

In Europe, a civic responsibility ethos is taking hold as residents dim lights and lower thermostats to confront brewing economic and energy crises. Across the Atlantic, Americans are taking a more individualistic approach to resilience.

Like the others who volunteered to make the change, he gets a bonus. He says he’s drawn to the personal growth inherent in working overnight, which requires more autonomy in problem-solving. But he is also responding to a deeper sense of civic responsibility to help confront the brewing economic and energy crises in Europe. 

“In this current climate, we’re in a period of uncertainty. No one can say how long it’s going to last,” he says as he takes up his post, meticulously straightening each cardboard box of envelopes before sending them along a rhythmically clicking conveyor belt.

Colette Davidson

Rémi Pantalacci works at a French envelope manufacturing firm on the night shift, which the company has instituted to take advantage of lower utility rates.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is presenting parts of the West with some of the biggest challenges since World War II. Long-held assumptions about access to cheap energy have been turned upside down.

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