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🗓️ 21 November 2024
⏱️ 55 minutes
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As policy changes course in the US, is energy efficiency the key that can unlock a sustainable future?
In our latest episode from the COP29 climate talks in Baku, Azerbaijan, host Ed Crooks talks to our guests about the challenges facing the energy transition, including the far-reaching implications of a second Trump administration, as asks whether getting smarter about the ways we use energy can be part of the solution.
In the first part of the show, Ed welcomes back Vijay Vaitheeswaran, Global Energy and Climate Innovation Editor at The Economist. He and his team have a couple of big pieces in the latest edition, giving their views on the outlook for the transition in the US and around the world. They are joined by Zach Friedman, Senior Director of Federal Policy at Ceres, which is a US-based group that works with investors and businesses in sustainability issues.
The trio discuss how US energy policy is likely to change under the Trump administration and a Republican-controlled Congress. They debate whether innovative mechanisms such carbon tariff for the US that is like the European carbon border adjustment mechanism could help align the administration’s economic objectives with climate goals. They highlight some hopeful signs for clean energy development, including the prospect of permitting reform that could expedite infrastructure projects. And they also explore why energy efficiency—a critical yet often overlooked component of the energy transition—could unlock massive cost and emissions savings while paving the way for renewable energy growth.
Later in the episode, Ed speaks with Jon Creyts, CEO of RMI, which describes itself as a “think-tank, a do-tank and a scale-tank”. He makes a compelling case for why energy efficiency is the "first fuel" of the transition: the best fuel of all is the fuel you don’t need. He argues for the central role of efficiency in reducing emissions, lowering costs, and supporting renewable energy targets. At COP28 in Dubai a year ago, the world agreed a goal of doubling of global energy efficiency improvement rates by 2030. So far it has not made any progress towards that goal. But with innovative approaches such as modular retrofits for housing, Jon illustrates how leadership and vision can dismantle structural barriers, making energy efficiency a linchpin of the low-carbon transition.
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0:00.0 | Looking to understand the geopolitical and global forces at play shaping our energy future, |
0:06.4 | and check out a new podcast series, Energize the Future of Energy, from G0 Media and Inbridge, |
0:12.3 | co-hosted by JJ Ramberg and Greg Ebel. |
0:15.3 | They dig into the biggest energy challenges and opportunities like AI, policy and innovation, |
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0:26.5 | you get your podcasts, or visit g0media.com the energy gang, a discussion show from Wood McKenzie about the fast-changing world of energy. |
0:50.9 | I'm Ed Crooks, and this is the latest in our series of special episodes from the COP29 climate talks in Baku, Azerbaijan. In a moment, I'm going to be talking about a |
0:59.4 | very important and under-discussed topic, energy efficiency, with John Kreutz of RMI. |
1:04.9 | But first, although President-elect Donald Trump has not sent any representatives to the conference, |
1:09.6 | he's been looming large over proceedings |
1:11.5 | here. The US is the world's largest economy, and in recent years, has been one of the most |
1:15.5 | dynamic in investment and innovation in low carbon energy. Every other country here wants to know |
1:20.0 | how energy in the US will evolve under the coming administration. So to discuss what the next four |
1:24.4 | years hold for energy in the US, I'm joined by Zach Friedman, |
1:32.0 | who's the Senior Director of Federal Policy at Ceres, which is a group, well, how do you describe what you do? You work with investors and businesses on sustainability, right? |
1:35.8 | Yes. We have two sides that work on what we call operational leadership, so helping companies |
1:40.1 | on their sustainability journeys, and we take those leaders on sustainability to advocate for |
1:45.5 | smart, federal and state policy that drives private investment in technologies and solutions |
1:51.0 | that reduce costs and emissions and strengthen our economy. |
1:53.5 | Fantastic. Well, welcome to the energy gang. Great to have you on here. And it's also a pleasure |
1:57.2 | to welcome back Vijay Vise Warran, who is the Global Energy and Climate Innovation Editor at the Economist. Hi, Vijay. How are you? Fantastic. pleasure to welcome back Vijay Vaitis-Waron, who is the Global Energy and Climate |
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