Rob West, Founder and Lead Analyst at Thunder Said Energy, shares his insights on the current state of energy transition. He discusses the need to move beyond catastrophe avoidance to embrace aspirational energy visions. Government subsidies and their effects on energy innovation are explored, along with the impact of AI on efficiency. Geopolitical shifts, particularly around Estonia, highlight the challenges in energy markets. Rob critiques existing policies impacting low-income populations, advocating for energy abundance and innovative solutions for sustainable development.
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insights INSIGHT
Unifying Energy Theme
The world lacks a unifying energy theme, hindering progress.
Shifting from a "decarbonize at any cost" narrative to a focus on abundant, clean energy like solar can yield better outcomes.
insights INSIGHT
Positive Energy Vision
Current energy discussions focus on avoiding catastrophe instead of positive progress.
A shift towards aspirational visions is needed to inspire and motivate.
insights INSIGHT
Competitiveness and Energy Policy
Voter behavior and government policy changes are heavily influenced by energy affordability and economic competitiveness.
Policies prioritizing competitiveness may lead to reduced support for clean energy initiatives solely based on their environmental benefits.
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Today we are thrilled to kick off the first COBT episode of 2025 with our good friend Rob West, Founder and Lead Analyst at Thunder Said Energy. Rob started Thunder Said in 2019 and provides unique, thought-provoking, and economic-driven insights into energy transition research and technologies. He is a long-time energy analyst and previously built and led the energy practice at Redburn and served at Sanford C. Bernstein and Partners Capital before launching Thunder Said. This episode marks Rob’s fifth appearance on COBT; he most recently joined in January 2024 (episode linked here). We were delighted to connect with Rob to reflect on 2024 and explore what the future might hold for energy in 2025. Rob has now kicked us off in 2022, 2024 and 2025. This may be becoming a tradition!
We covered a lot of territory in our conversation starting with Rob’s musings on trying to define what energy transition actually means, how the world’s current focus on avoiding catastrophe needs to be replaced with more aspirational visions of human progress, the role of policy, subsidies, and competitiveness, the need for energy abundance to support human development, and the risks of pursuing costly and ineffective strategies that fail to achieve their objectives. Rob shares his perspective on how energy affordability and economic competitiveness influence voter behavior and government policy shifts, how shifting geopolitical dynamics are shaping global energy strategies, the potential for AI to enable breakthroughs on everything from materials value chains to DAC, the geopolitical situation in Estonia, and the broader implications of Russian aggression. At one point Rob observes “the West is already at war, it just doesn’t admit it because of the implications.” We discuss the importance of assigning real weight to geopolitical risks in energy forecasts and market strategies, Rob’s “F-U” Recession Scenario where countries retreat from global trade and cooperation leading to disruptions in energy and other value chains, and Texas’s continued role as a hub for energy innovation and growth. We ended by exploring the global bottleneck in moving energy from where it’s created to where it’s needed, growth opportunities in utilities and midstream, the increasing volatility in energy systems, the concept of the “third great energy transition” with semiconductor technologies, and much more. As mentioned, Rob’s “Energy Transition: Classic Blunders” video from December 2024 is linked here. We can’t thank Rob enough for sharing his time and thoughts with us today to kick off the year in style.
Mike Bradley kicked us off by discussing the performance of bonds, commodities and equities since our last COBT on December 17th with Dr. Steven Koonin (episode linked here). He noted that the 10-year bond is currently yielding ~4.65% (up from ~4.4%) which is a Trump post-election high and a one-year high. The FED cut interest rates 25-basis points at their last FOMC Meeting, and bond trader consensus is now in the camp that there’ll only be two additional interest rate cuts in 2025. On the broader equity market front, the S&P 500 has taken a bit of a breather (down ~1%) with the Energy (+2%) and Technology (+1%) sectors outperforming. On the crude oil market front, WTI oil price has rallied ~$4/bbl (to ~$74/bbl) and has pushed above its recent narrow trading range of $68-$71/bbl. Crude oil trader sentiment heading into 2025 continues to be mostly bearish, even though WTI time spreads having recently spiked, which could be signaling a tighter physical oil market. He further noted that Saudi seems to be getting more constructive on crude oil given that it raised its official selling price to Asia for the first time in three months. Global oil prices also seem