OIES Podcast – From Scarcity to Scale: The New Economics of Energy
Podcasts - Oxford Institute for Energy Studies
Release Date: 07/08/2025
Podcasts - Oxford Institute for Energy Studies
Power system flexibility has emerged as a central challenge of decarbonizing the electric power industry worldwide. In China, new coal-fired generation is still being added to meet rising peak loads, and newly-constructed coal plants are required to operate flexibly, but the system still features a relatively low degree of flexibility. In this podcast Anders Hove, Dimitra Apostolopoulou and David Robinson discuss three case studies of the European power sector with potential value for the Chinese energy transition. The case studies were selected at a workshop with Chinese experts, and the...
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In this lates OIES podcast, brought to you by the Gas Programme, James Henderson talks to Bill Farren-Price about their latest paper on the geopolitics that is influencing, and being influenced by, the global gas market. They start with a general overview of the current gas market and the key political drivers that are impacting the views of suppliers and consumers on the future of gas. They consider the impact of the sharp change in the direction of Russian exports since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022, reflecting on the strong position this now gives to China as it further diversifies its...
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In this latest OIES podcast from the Energy Transition Programme, Dimitra Apostolopoulou talks to Managing Director of Energy Management, Markets and Risk at Reventus Power, Naz Osmancik, about his latest paper titled “From Certainty to Volatility Beyond the Contract: Managing Risks and Opportunities for Renewable Assets with expiring CfD Support”. This podcast explores the shifting risk landscape for renewable energy projects as they move beyond the stability of government-backed Contracts for Difference (CfDs). We discuss how the expiry of CfDs exposes investors to wholesale price...
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On Friday, November 7, the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies (OIES) held its annual Oil Day, themed “Navigating Oil Narratives.” The event was organized around three main sessions: Oil demand prospects in the context of an uncertain macroeconomic and geopolitical environment Supply outlooks, covering U.S. shale, OPEC+, and non-OPEC+ producers outside the United States Inventory dynamics, including traditional relationships such as inventories versus time spreads, and the influence of hedge funds and other non-commercial participants in oil markets In this podcast, Bassam...
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European policymakers face a dilemma regarding the entry of Chinese firms into the European wind market. Chinese turbines are cheaper than their Western competitors. Given the small number of players in the European market, Chinese manufacturers could provide a boost to the market and inject new competitive pressure. Yet there are concerns that allowing Chinese OEMs into the offshore wind sector, either as developers of or investors in projects, or as equipment providers for European-led projects, could undermine European industry. In addition to commercial threats, security concerns have also...
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In a new episode of the OIES podcast, host Hasan Muslemani speaks with Mathieu Lucquiaud and Ryan Cowden about their groundbreaking research on how electricity from natural gas can achieve lifecycle emissions comparable to renewables – if paired with carbon capture and cleaner production practices. The discussion unpacks how upstream methane and CO₂ emissions can be slashed through regulation and technology, how carbon capture rates above 98% are now technically and economically viable, and why lifecycle analysis is key to assessing true climate impact. The takeaway: natural gas with CCS,...
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In this latest OIES podcast, from the Gas Programme, James Henderson talks to Mike Fulwood about the paper he has edited on the outlook for as demand in a world of gas prices at $6/mmbtu. The concept of the paper is based on the consensus view that the imminent wave of new LNG projects will cause an oversupply of gas in the market and lead to lower prices through the rest of this decade. A number of OIES research fellows have analysed what this might do to gas demand as consumers react to lower prices, and Mike has brought the results together in a paper which looks at the major markets that...
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In a new Oxford Institute for Energy Studies podcast, Hasan Muslemani speaks to Hannah Hauman, Global Head of Carbon Trading at Trafigura about Article 6 of the Paris Agreement and how the carbon market is unlocking scalable investment and trade. The podcast describes the current market foundations and first trades, demand forecasts to 2030 based on existing regulation, and the key enablers to ensure supply can deliver against the ask: digital infrastructure, robust legal frameworks, and financial products to scale investment. Together, these steps can help carbon become a scalable, globally...
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In this latest OIES podcast, from the Gas Programme, James Henderson talks to Jack Sharples and Anouk Honore about the latest Gas Quarterly and their thoughts on the current state of the global gas market. Jack opens the podcast with a review of the current market looking at price movements over the past three months and assessing the key geopolitical and commercial factors which have influenced the market over the past three months. Anouk picks up the story with a review of Europe gas demand, highlighting the increasing volatility of gas demand in the power sector, the struggle for demand...
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In this latest episode of the OIES Electricity Programme podcast, Dimitra Apostolopoulou speaks with Sarah Montgomery, CEO and Co-Founder of Infyos, about the critical role of energy storage in achieving net zero. Building on Sarah’s recent presentation at the OIES annual Energy Transition event in June, the conversation begins with a deep dive into how storage technologies fit within the broader strategy for delivering reliable, low-carbon electricity systems. Dimitra and Sarah discuss the scale of storage needed to meet decarbonisation targets and examine where deployment is accelerating...
info_outlineIn this latest OIES podcast from the Electricity Programme, Dimitra Apostolopoulou talks to the Director of Research at the Electricity Programme and Senior Research Fellow Rahmat Poudineh about his latest paper titled “From Scarcity to Scale: The New Economics of Energy”. In this podcast, we begin by explaining how our energy system is shifting from an operating-expense model tied to fuel burn to a capital-expense model dominated by upfront hardware. Once a solar or wind asset is installed, each additional kilowatt-hour costs almost nothing, changing the economics of the energy sector. Next, we discuss how cheap, clean electricity is the bedrock of deep decarbonisation and how clean-tech manufacturing exhibits a “winner-takes-most” where early movers achieve significant cost advantages. Related to this, we move to energy security in the new energy paradigm, where governments must diversify gigafactory and refining capacity, build strategic mineral buffers, stress-test supply chains and harden an increasingly digital grid against cyber threats. As zero-marginal-cost generation becomes dominant, markets will need to pay for capacity, flexibility, and services through long-term anchors, granular locational-temporal prices, and open auctions for storage, demand response, and fast frequency support. We conclude the podcast with some thoughts on future decarbonised energy systems and addressing remaining innovation gaps, where regulators must act as system choreographers rather than gatekeepers, so millions of distributed energy resource “dancers” can stabilise the grid without unfairly shifting costs.