Until the Russia–Ukraine War, governments were largely concerned with balancing two incompatible goals: keeping energy cheap while supporting the production of low-carbon alternatives that policymakers had hoped would one day be able to compete with oil and gas on their own. Left unsaid was the challenge of how this goal will be achieved, especially on a timeline of less than 30 years. That was a problem for the next decade’s leaders. The collapse of Europe’s energy relationship with Russia has demolished the hope of keeping energy cheap. So does this mean expensive renewables will get even less support moving forward? Or will higher energy costs instead become easier for politicians to swallow?
As part of our recently launched Trading the Transition service, we publish regular Insights exploring important energy transition topics and their implications on broader markets in detail.
Recently, we released a pragmatic review analysing how Western sanctions on Russian energy supplies will affect global efforts toward decarbonisation.
The economic and political impacts of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have shifted the balance of power in the energy “trilemma” that faces policy experts and decision makers, as previously assumed Russian energy supplies have evaporated. This has triggered a rapid evolution in the relationship between environmental sustainability, energy costs and energy security, which form the three pillars of transition policy and investment debates.
This Insight and our other Trading the Transition publications regularly offer our views on the interplay between these dynamics against a world that won’t stand still, exploring questions such as:
We delve into all these questions and more. Fill out the form on the right to access the report.
Energy Aspects’ Trading the Transition service is aimed at helping participants in today’s energy market understand the balance between expanding green energy demand and the realities of the current energy landscape.
We offer analysis that dives deep into fundamentals and reacts to market events. Our extensive databases enable us to flesh out your forecasts and drive models.
As the energy transition gathers pace and markets look to find their feet in an uncertain future, you can rely on our robust data, industry-leading analysis and timely forecasts to trade, invest, finance and plan.
What Energy Aspects does so well is pull together a very brief summary. If you want to dive into detail, you can read the whole report—but it’s still very brief, so you’ve got time to do that. You can get wise reading Energy Aspects’ stuff for two hours a week.
Mary-Jane Hogg
Commercial Director Feedstocks - Dow