4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 16 April 2024
⏱️ 55 minutes
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As half the world heads to the polls, how important will the results be for efforts to cut emissions?
Over half the world lives in a country that will be holding an election this year. The votes come at a time when resistance to the energy transition is building in many parts of the world, as concerns around energy security grow and some of the challenges of decarbonization come into focus. In the US, a finely-balanced election offers voters two sharply differing visions of the energy future. But there are other places around the world where elections could also shape the direction of energy policy, including the EU, where parties that are skeptical of climate action are on course to win an increased number of seats in the European Parliament.
To explore the ramifications of these key elections around the world, host Ed Crooks is joined by Energy Gang regular Amy Myers Jaffe, director of New York University’s Energy, Climate Justice, and Sustainability Lab, and by Vijay Vaitheeswaran, global energy & climate innovation editor at The Economist. The show is recorded live from NYU, as the gang take part in discussions on the outlook for elections and energy policy in 2024.
Together they debate the potential consequences of the US election for issues including permitting reform clean energy tax credits, and look at some other significant votes around the world, in India, Mexico, the European parliament among others.
While other countries are arguing over the right course for energy policy, China is betting big on low-carbon technologies, adding a huge amount of manufacturing capacity in solar, EVs and lithium ion batteries. Those are what the Chinese government calls “the new three” sectors, intended to drive export growth, and they are having a far-reaching impacts on energy all around the world.
The Biden administration has pinned its climate policy on using support for low-carbon energy to incentivize manufacturing investment and create well-paying jobs. But with China adding so much capacity in key sectors, sending prices for products such as solar panels tumbling, the challenges facing that strategy are growing. That is an issue that will play out in elections in the US and elsewhere this year: what does it mean for clean energy globally if China continues to dominate the competition?
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the Energy Gang, a discussion show about the fast changing world of energy. |
0:14.0 | I'm Ed Crooks. |
0:15.0 | Now it's a special edition of the Energy Gang we've got for you today because we're being hosted |
0:19.1 | by New University here in Manhattan where we're taking part in the discussion on the elections of |
0:23.7 | 2024 and what they're going to mean for the energy transition. |
0:27.9 | To discuss that subject, I'm joined by our old friend Amy and Miles Jaffey, who's the director |
0:31.8 | of the Energy Climate Justice and Sustainability |
0:34.2 | Lab here at NYU. |
0:35.2 | Hi, Amy, how are you? |
0:36.5 | I am great and great to be hosting you here at NYU today. |
0:40.1 | Ed, the Washington Square Park is just alive with spring, so good day to be visiting. |
0:46.2 | Thanks very much for hosting us here at NYU. |
0:48.8 | And it's also a great pleasure to welcome a newcomer to the Energy Gang. |
0:51.8 | V.J Baitisw Warren is the Global Energy and Climate Innovation |
0:55.1 | editor at The Economist. |
0:56.8 | That's a great title. |
0:58.1 | What does that mean? |
0:58.7 | What do you cover at the Economist? |
1:00.1 | Thanks. |
1:00.8 | Great to be here, a long time listener, first time caller, as it were. |
1:04.1 | I cover the energy industry, both the traditional oil and gas stuff as well as the new stuff. |
1:09.8 | And that's really where the climate innovation piece of it comes in looking at the energy |
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