loader from loading.io

The Electro-Tech Revolution: Why the Energy Transition Is Happening Faster Than You Think

Climate Risk Podcast

Release Date: 05/07/2026

The Electro-Tech Revolution: Why the Energy Transition Is Happening Faster Than You Think show art The Electro-Tech Revolution: Why the Energy Transition Is Happening Faster Than You Think

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Kingsmill Bond, Senior Energy Strategist at Ember, as we explore why renewables and electrification are reshaping the global energy system faster than many realise.   We talk a great deal on this podcast about the risks and the policy challenges of the climate transition. But if that transition is actually going to happen — and happen at the speed that the science demands — there is something that has to sit at its very centre. Not the frameworks, not the disclosure requirements, not the net zero targets. The actual physical transformation of how we...

info_outline
The Case for Adaptation: Heat Stress and the Built Environment show art The Case for Adaptation: Heat Stress and the Built Environment

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Richard Flemmings, founder and CEO of Map Impact, as we explore why “dry perils” such as heat, drought and wildfire are emerging as critical climate risks for real estate and financial decision-making. When climate risks are discussed, the focus often falls on what we might call “wet perils”: things like flooding, storms, and coastal erosion. These risks are well studied, widely modelled, and increasingly embedded in financial decision-making. But another category of hazards is emerging: “dry perils” such as heat stress, drought, and wildfire, which are often less...

info_outline
Risk as an Enabler: How Development Banks Build Climate Resilience show art Risk as an Enabler: How Development Banks Build Climate Resilience

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Søren Elbech, Chief Risk Officer at the Inter-American Development Bank, as we explore how development banks use risk to support countries facing climate and other systemic challenges.   When we think about risk in banking, the focus is often on managing exposures, pricing credit, allocating capital, and ensuring resilience. But what happens when the mission of a bank is not just to manage risk, but to actively take it on in order to improve lives?  In that context, risk becomes something to be deployed — carefully, deliberately, and often in...

info_outline
A Different Kind of Bank: How to Embed Impact in Finance show art A Different Kind of Bank: How to Embed Impact in Finance

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Sian Williams, Chief Risk Officer at Triodos Bank UK, as we examine how values-led banking can generate positive impact for people, planet and the financial system.   When we think about sustainable finance, the conversation often revolves around targets, disclosures and voluntary alliances. But what happens when sustainability is not an add-on, but the foundation of a bank’s entire business model?   If sustainability is the starting point, lending decisions inevitably look different, and more complex. Not everything can be reduced...

info_outline
Protecting the Beta: Why Systemic Risk Now Shapes Investment Returns show art Protecting the Beta: Why Systemic Risk Now Shapes Investment Returns

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Julie Calkins, Director of Sustainability Strategy at Generation Investment Management, as we explore how interconnected risks spanning climate, nature, inequality and AI challenge traditional approaches to risk and return. In investing, we spend a lot of time debating alpha — what gives one portfolio an edge over another. But increasingly, the bigger question is about beta, and the underlying conditions that make any returns possible in the first place. And here we can think about a stable climate, nature as infrastructure and even social cohesion and functioning institutions....

info_outline
What We Learned About Climate and Nature Risk in 2025 show art What We Learned About Climate and Nature Risk in 2025

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Jo Paisley and Maxine Nelson of the GARP Risk Institute as they look back on key learnings from the past year of the Climate Risk Podcast. As we head into 2026, the GARP Climate Risk Podcast kicks off the new year with a retrospective on the past 12 months, reviewing the key themes and insights that emerged during 2025’s podcasts.   After 6 years of hosting the podcast, this might be the most wide-ranging conversation so far – from how one should adjust probability of default for climate risk, to the risk factors that might lead to the...

info_outline
Societal Collapse in a Warming World: A Risk Manager’s Lens show art Societal Collapse in a Warming World: A Risk Manager’s Lens

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Dr. Luke Kemp of the Center for the Study of Existential Risk at the University of Cambridge, as we dive into the risk factors for societal collapse in both the past and future. When risk professionals talk about systemic risk, we usually mean markets, institutions, and interconnected exposures. But zoom out far enough, and there’s a bigger question underneath it all: what makes an entire society resilient – or vulnerable – to collapse? That’s why in this episode, we explore the history and future of societal collapse through a risk lens: looking at how complex systems...

info_outline
Embedding Nature Risk: Insights from a Senior Banking Professional show art Embedding Nature Risk: Insights from a Senior Banking Professional

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Judson Berkey, Managing Director in the Chief Sustainability Office at UBS, as we learn first-hand how banks are approaching nature risk. Within finance, nature is usually treated as background: important, but invisible. However, that is beginning to change. New frameworks, regulations, and expectations are emerging worldwide, and many firms are starting to measure their impacts and dependencies on nature. In this episode, we explore how that shift is happening from the perspective of someone inside one of the world’s largest banks. We discuss: Which lessons from climate...

info_outline
Positive Tipping Points: How to Fix the Climate Crisis show art Positive Tipping Points: How to Fix the Climate Crisis

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Prof. Tim Lenton OBE, as we explore the potential of positive tipping points in accelerating the transition to a net-zero economy. What happens when the conversation about climate change shifts from avoiding disaster to unlocking positive change? Suddenly, it’s not just about risk - it’s about momentum. Because while some systems may be close to dangerous tipping points, others – like clean energy, electric transport, and sustainable food – are tipping in the right direction. That’s why in this episode, we explore how to accelerate those positive shifts, including: ...

info_outline
From Basel to Biodiversity: An Ex-Central Banker’s Take on Nature Risk show art From Basel to Biodiversity: An Ex-Central Banker’s Take on Nature Risk

Climate Risk Podcast

Hear from Hirotaka Hideshima, former central banker and member of the TNFD, as we explore the parallels between financial risk, nature risk and regulation.  What happens when a central banker steps into the world of nature risk? Well, they can see parallels between financial risk and nature risk that aren’t obvious to others. For example, just as the global financial crisis exposed systemic vulnerabilities in banking, nature loss poses systemic risks that today’s models and disclosures struggle to capture. And although the Basel framework and the Taskforce on Nature-related...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Hear from Kingsmill Bond, Senior Energy Strategist at Ember, as we explore why renewables and electrification are reshaping the global energy system faster than many realise.  

We talk a great deal on this podcast about the risks and the policy challenges of the climate transition. But if that transition is actually going to happen — and happen at the speed that the science demands — there is something that has to sit at its very centre. Not the frameworks, not the disclosure requirements, not the net zero targets. The actual physical transformation of how we generate and use energy. The growth of renewables. The electrification of the things we use every day: our cars, our heating, our industry. Without that, everything else is commentary. 

So where do things actually stand? How fast is the transition really moving? What does the data tell us that the mainstream forecasts might have overlooked? And in a world of geopolitical turbulence, rising energy security concerns, and significant political headwinds, what are the barriers still standing between where we are and where we need to get to? 

This episode attempts to answer those questions. We’ll be covering: 

  • Why flows matter more than stocks — and what the data tells us about how fast the transition is really moving  

  • The geopolitical energy shocks of the 2020s, what makes them different from the 1970s, and why this time we actually have solutions  

  • And what all of this means practically for risk professionals trying to get ahead of the transition rather than simply react to it 

 ---------------- 

To find out more about the Sustainability and Climate Risk (SCR®) Certificate, follow this link: https://www.garp.org/scr 

For more information on climate risk, visit GARP’s Global Sustainability and Climate Risk Resource Centre: https://www.garp.org/sustainability-climate 

If you have any questions, thoughts, or feedback regarding this podcast series, we would love to hear from you at: climateriskpodcast@garp.com 

 ------------------

Today’s Speaker

Kingsmill Bond is Senior Energy Strategist at Ember, an open data think tank that has been tracking the growth of renewable energy and its impact on the global electricity system.   

Kingsmill spent years as a financial analyst and strategist at some of the world's leading investment banks before making the transition to energy. This has seen him working at Carbon Tracker and the Rocky Mountain Institute before his move to Ember.