4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 27 June 2024
⏱️ 77 minutes
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In this second special episode of Wood Mackenzie's The Energy Gang, recorded at the Reuters Global Energy Transition 2024 conference in New York, we speak with leaders at some of the key companies shaping the energy transition. We hear about how they are tackling the challenge of meeting rising demand for electricity while at the same time reducing emissions.
Greg Jackson, CEO of Octopus Energy, talks about his ambitions in the US market, which are centered around selling the company’s Kraken technology platform to utilities. He highlights the global potential of digitalization in propelling the energy transition forward.
The transition towards renewable energy is governed not only by technological progress, but also by regulatory and policy frameworks. Our second guest, David Carroll, Chief Renewables Officer at Engie, talks about how legislation including the Inflation Reduction Act, and regulatory initiatives such as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's (FERC) Order No. 1920, can catalyze the adoption of renewable energy sources.
Next we talk to Ana Quelhas, Managing Director of the Hydrogen Business Unit at EDP Renewables, about the role of hydrogen in the shift away from carbon-intensive energy. Some of the hype around low-carbon hydrogen has been dying away over the past year or two. But Ana Quelhas argues that, if done right, hydrogen can still be an important part of a zero-carbon energy system, for uses where direct electrification may not be feasible.
And finally, Bill Newsom, President and CEO of Mitsubishi Power Americas, tells us about what the energy revolution means for equipment suppliers. His company is developing and deploying solutions that address the demand for “clean firm” power that is available round-the-clock, through hydrogen and carbon capture. He talks about the prospect that these technologies could help provide the massive increase in 24/7 low-carbon electricity that will be required for new data centers and factories, and to charge electric vehicles.
Look out for the next special episode from day three of the conference, available on Friday June 28.
You can find Ed and the show on most social media platforms: we’re @theenergygang on X. Subscribe to the Energy Gang on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you don’t miss the next show.
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the Energy Gang, a discussion show about the fast-moving world of energy. |
0:14.0 | I'm Ed Croix. This is the second in a series of special episodes from the Reuters Global Energy |
0:19.3 | Transition 2024 conference here in New York. |
0:23.0 | Today we've been hearing from leaders of some of the key companies that are driving the energy |
0:26.5 | transition, discussing the opportunities and the challenges that they see in low-carbon energy. |
0:31.4 | A talk first to Greg Jackson, his chief executive of the UK-based |
0:35.0 | Octopus Energy. |
0:36.0 | Greg, thanks for much to joining us on the energy gang. |
0:38.1 | Honestly, thank you for having me. It's been a while. It's been a long time coming. |
0:41.6 | Indeed, it has. |
0:43.0 | I'm sorry it has taken so long to get you on, but I'm very glad we've managed to do that now. |
0:48.0 | So look, for the benefit of people who might not know Octopus Energy, could you talk a little bit about the company, where it comes from |
0:54.7 | or what you do? |
0:55.7 | Octopus energy is kind of best known. I don't know for example is the UK's largest power |
1:00.6 | supplier, where you supply maybe just under 7 million homes in the UK. |
1:05.0 | But the reality is that the founding team, we came from technology. |
1:09.8 | We used to build enterprise software. |
1:11.4 | When we sold that business, we looked around the world |
1:13.8 | and said, which sector has the greatest opportunity |
1:17.1 | for digitalization? |
1:19.7 | And we saw energy and utilities. |
1:22.3 | A $2 trillion sector running on a technology |
... |
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