Why exactly is this 2026 energy shock so different from the 1970s & 2022 shocks? Kate and Tim discuss our current energy security landscape, and outline some of the arguments made in their recent Polycrisis essay, just published with Phenomenal World. They also look at whether it matters that financial markets are becoming re-enthused about renewable energy. Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate Mackenzie, and Tim Sahay from the Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab at Johns Hopkins U...

The Polycrisis

The Polycrisis

03 | Demand Destruction | Fossil chaos and electric acceleration

MAY 12, 202628 MIN
The Polycrisis

03 | Demand Destruction | Fossil chaos and electric acceleration

MAY 12, 202628 MIN

Description

Why exactly is this 2026 energy shock so different from the 1970s & 2022 shocks? Kate and Tim discuss our current energy security landscape, and outline some of the arguments made in their recent Polycrisis essay, just published with Phenomenal World. They also look at whether it matters that financial markets are becoming re-enthused about renewable energy.Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate Mackenzie, and Tim Sahay from the Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. Produced by Sarah AllelyOriginal music by Russell StapletonMixed by Bethany StewartContact us at: [email protected]:Dawn of the Electric World Order: Global shockwaves from the war on Iran are accelerating the energy transition - The Polycrisis  May 8, 2026Investors pile into clean power as Iran war drives push for energy security - Financial Times, May 3, 2026 China's Green Tech Firms Target New Consumers Hit by Iran War Energy Shock - Bloomberg News, May 11, 2026Chinese Electrotech is the Big Winner in the Iran War - Paul Krugman's Substack - April 14, 2026Ember Global Electricity Review 2025 - Record renewables growth led by solar helped push clean power past 40% of global electricity in 2024, but heatwave-related demand spikes led to a small increase in fossil generation.