Energy market review of 2023

Energy News Beat

At the end of each year, I like to look back at the past year and ahead to what the coming 12 months might bring (which I will cover in a separate post tomorrow). In the past, I have focused primarily on the GB market, but over the past year, my work has taken me increasingly overseas, and this has been reflected in many of my blogs, so this summary takes a similarly broad view.

A year ago, I expected the Ukraine war to continue to dominate energy markets, and largely hedged my bets by posing a fairly long list of questions as themes for the year:

I would venture to guess that the main themes in the energy markets in 2023 will mirror those in 2022:

How will the EU fill its gas storage facilities in summer 2023?
Will Russia resume flows through Yamal to replace lost Nord Stream volumes?
Will competition for LNG remain high supporting prices?
Will France succeed in re-starting its nuclear reactors?
Will Norway act to restrict electricity exports?
Will policy interventions reduce gas production in Europe and gas imports to Europe?
Will there be blackouts during periods of low wind output in any of the European countries relying on wind power?

In the UK we can also expect further changes in the retail market…

Will Ofgem change its mind again on ring-fencing customer credit balances?
Will the price cap be replaced with a social tariff?
Will the Octopus acquisition of Bulb conclude successfully and how much will it the Bulb bailout end up costing consumers?

And more broadly…

Will the UK Government get serious about reducing heat losses from homes?
Will the Government change its mind about the application of windfall taxes?
Will the Government and NG ESO act on falling winter capacity margins?

As it turned out, a mild winter took much of the sting out of the Ukraine-related fears for the gas markets. Russian volumes were replaced largely with US LNG, as the EU rushed to deploy floating LNG import terminals. Nord Stream was not repaired, but the market was well supplied heading into this winter. Prices stabilised from the highs of 2022, with retail prices settling down at around double their pre-crisis levels. Wholesale gas prices recently saw 2-year lows.

France did re-start most of its nuclear reactors and EDF even managed to get the troubled Olkiluoto project over the line and into commercial operations. Norway is also acting to restrict exports, and is now planning to amend its Energy Act to allow electricity exports to be curtailed when water shortages are anticipated, rather than after they have occurred. Privately other countries warn they will not export if their domestic markets are stressed, irrespective of market rules.

While we did not see any low-wind blackouts, we have seen multiple failures of wind auctions, project cancellations and mounting losses among turbine manufacturers. This was one of the main energy stories in 2023, as the troubles within the wind sector began to crystallise.

In the UK, Ofgem did not change its mind on ring-fencing consumer credit balances – it still says it will only require this if a supplier appears to be entering financial distress. Whether this will be effective or akin to shutting the stable door after the horse has bolted remains to be seen. The price cap remains, for now, but calls for its replacement grow louder. And the Bulb acquisition has closed, but its final cost to consumer is so far unclear.

None of my “more broadly” questions were addressed in 2023 – not that I really expected them to – and nor do I expect any movement on them in 2024 as we gear up to another General Election. It is highly unlikely that we will see any radical actions in the UK energy markets this year.

So what were the key themes in 2023?

Subsidies dominate both in the US and EU

Towards the end of 2022, the EU agreed a cap on the price of gas, which was due to come into force on 15 February 2023 and last for one year, whereby gas contracts traded on European exchanges would see their prices capped if the TTF front month contract exceeded €180 /MWh, and remained €35 /MWh above an LNG reference price, for three business days. The cap was expanded to all EU hubs in May, and in December it was extended for a further year. The EU also applied caps to Russian oil products.

In 2022, the EU spent €672 billion on state subsidies for energy, which have continued in 2023. The EU is now urging countries to scale down support for consumers as energy prices have fallen back from last year’s highs. The UK Government effectively ended its subsidy scheme in March when the support level was set above the expected gas and electricity prices for the remainder of the year. The EU is concerned about budget responsibility among member states, with nine countries having deficits which violate the 3% of GDP threshold, including Italy, France, Spain and Belgium. The Commission intends to launch excessive deficit procedures at the end of June 2024. Some business support schemes have been extended by the Commission to June 2024.

However, various EU countries want to maintain subsidies, particularly in the power sector, as they fear competitive disadvantage, not least in light of generous US subsidies (see below). A compromise was reached in October under which new subsidies will be required to be structured as contracts for difference.

The US Inflation Reduction Act has started to have an effect –  in its first six months, more than 100,000 clean energy jobs were created in the US as a result of almost US$ 90 billion invested. According to the American Clean Power Association, a year after coming in to law, the Act had stimulated over US$ 270 billion of investment to develop utility-scale wind, solar, and storage projects, manufacturing facilities, supply chains in North America and 83 new or expanded clean energy manufacturing facilities, potentially creating 76 GW of manufacturing capacity. Two thirds of these for solar manufacturing. These figures exceed the total spend on clean energy in the 7 years prior to the introduction of the IRA.

185 GW of clean power projects have been announced during the first 50 weeks of the Act – equal to almost 80% of current clean power capacity in the US. The Department of Energy’s Loan Program Office has been reviewing more than 140 clean energy financing and guarantee requests totalling approximately US$ 121 billion. Solar PV capacity increased 47% in the first quarter of 2023, making up more than half of all new grid capacity, while new manufacturing investments could increase capacity from 9 GW to 60 GW by 2026.

After one year, the IRA was credited with creating more than 170,000 clean energy jobs, with companies having announced over US$ 110 billion in clean energy manufacturing investments. There hasn’t been very much impact on inflation, however. The EU continues to believe its carbon pricing approach is superior – next year shipping will be included in the EU ETS for the first time – but may economists think the IRA will attract investment into the US and away from Europe and Asia. The EU has also implemented its Green Deal Industrial Plan for the Net-Zero Age, together with revised state aid rules for renewable energy investments, however no new money has been included in the scheme.

The upshot is that while there is pressure within Europe to scale back subsidies to end users, there are still plenty of subsidies around for generation. This is not limited to renewable generation since various capacity market schemes exist to manage the intermittency risks from the increased deployment of wind and solar.

Grid connections moved from being a niche concern to headline news

Back in July, I wrote:

“The issue of grid connection delays has garnered a lot of attention recently, as developers report large waits to connect to electricity networks, and accuse network operators of holding back net zero plans. Networks are often seen as boring but necessary, and from a regulatory standpoint, Ofgem has not given them the attention they deserve – its network charging and access reforms are dragging on (seven years and counting), with the work largely moved out of the original Significant and Targeted Code Reviews into a new DUoS SCR and TNUoS Taskforce.

Market participants could be forgiven for thinking that this has simply not been a priority for Ofgem, except that now the complaints have got louder, and the press is reporting on multi-year connection delays, the always reactionary regulator has been spurred into talking about it if not actually taking action.”

This problem has not only affected the UK, but is prevalent across the developed world. Often in industry gatherings I hear people express a desire to adopt “best practice” from elsewhere, but in the case of connections management, this habit meant that many countries found themselves stuck with an out-dated framework that was unfit for modern, de-centralised grids. And worse, with cumbersome change processes which make it hard to update this increasingly obsolete bureaucracy.

In October, the International Energy Agency (“IEA”) published a report entitled Electricity Grids and Secure Energy Transitions in which it sets out the grid-related challenges to the energy transition. It identifies regulatory reform, planning reform, increased grid investment and development of supply chains and workforce skills as the steps necessary to enable these challenges to be overcome.

“To achieve countries’ national energy and climate goals, the world’s electricity use needs to grow 20% faster in the next decade than it did in the previous one…Reaching national goals also means adding or refurbishing a total of over 80 million kilometres of grids by 2040, the equivalent of the entire existing global grid,”
– IEA, Electricity Grids and Secure Energy Transition

Developed world power grids are aging at the same time that they require reinforcement and expansion to accommodate renewable generation. Only around 23% of grid infrastructure in advanced economies is under 10 years old, and more than half is over 20 years old. Transformers, circuit breakers and other switchgear in substations typically have a design life of 30 to 40 years. Underground and subsea cables are generally designed for 40 years, although newer versions may be expected to last for 50 years, while overhead transmission lines can go for up to 60 years before requiring a major overhaul. However, expensive items such as transformers are often kept in use past their expected lifetime, due to their high cost of replacement.

Upgrading and expanding power grids will cost US$ billions, and will be complicated by supply chain constraints and restricted access to raw materials. While policy-makers and regulators can overhaul planning and permitting process, and connection queue management, there is little that can be done to manage these supply chain challenges, and it’s far from clear how these projects will be paid for. While this issue came on the radar in 2023, it’s likely to remain on the agenda for the next few years.

Wind projects run out of puff

I came back to the topic of the cost of renewable generation and the Levelised Cost of Energy (“LCOE”) several times last year, addressing the limitations of the approach (The myth that renewables are cheap persists in part due to the flawed use of LCOE) and the superiority of the EROI (energy return on energy invested) approach.

In June I wrote about the dissonance between the widely held belief that windfarm costs are falling, and mounting, multi-billion dollar losses among turbine manufacturers. I also described the findings of Professor Gordon Hughes from the University of Edinburgh, as to the cost trends for windfarms, whose accounts are available for public inspection at Companies House. He found that:

The actual costs of on-shore and off-shore wind generation had not fallen significantly over the previous two decades and he saw little prospect that they would fall significantly in the next five or even ten years;
While some of the component costs had declined, overall costs had not. The weighted return for investors and lenders had fallen sharply, especially for off-shore wind, due to a reduction in perceived risk. In addition, the average output per MW of new capacity may have increased, particularly for off-shore turbines, however, those gains were offset by higher operating and maintenance costs;
The capital costs per MW of capacity to build new wind farms decreased substantially from 2002 to about 2015 and then, at best, remained constant until 2020; and
The classic period for early cost reductions was over by 2010. While off-shore wind was in itself an immature technology, it was based on two significantly more mature technologies: on-shore wind and oil and gas infrastructure, limiting the potential for learning curve benefits.

I highlighted the difficulties faced by successful projects in the AR4 contracts for difference (“CfD”) auction round, and the fact that developers had been asking for enhanced economics. I questioned the tactics of developers, entering the action at prices they knew were too low to make the projects economic and wondered what this would mean for AR5. In September, I described the failure of AR5, which saw no bids at all for off-shore wind projects.

The following month I described similar failures elsewhere in the world. During the whole of 2022 there were no off-shore wind investments in the EU other than a handful of small floating projects. Several projects had been expected to reach financial close last year, but final investment decisions were delayed due to inflation, market interventions, and uncertainty about future revenues. Overall, the EU saw only 9 GW worth of new turbine orders in 2022, a 47% drop on 2021. After failing to secure enhanced economics for projects off the New Jersey coast, Orsted cancelled them.

I summarised the problems facing the wind sector:

Technological: a poorly managed push for larger turbines has run into trouble with warranty claims driving losses and distracting OEMs from production activities;
Operational: badly structured planning processes as well as poorly structured commercial contracts are leading to project delays; and
Economic: a dis-connect between the expectations of policy-makers that wind generation is “cheap” and the realities of rising supply chain costs and the adverse impact of higher inflation at the same time as cheap Chinese alternatives begin to take hold, particularly in Europe.

This is another topic that is likely to run into 2024.

Renewed interest in nuclear power

2023 saw the opening of two long-awaited nuclear projects, the Olkiluoto EPR and the Vogtle AP-1000. Both projects had seen extensive cost over-runs and delays. Meanwhile South Korean developer KEPCO is poised to open its seventh and eighth APR-1400 reactors Shin Hanul 2 in South Korea and Barakah 4 in the UAE. The UK Government is poised to announce a new nuclear roadmap and it to be hoped that it will turn to KEPCO for the next large-scale nuclear reactors for GB, and not push for more EPRs, not least because the latest industry gossip is that Hinkley Point C will be delayed until the 2030s.

In addition to seeing its first new reactor in years, the US has also started to re-think the closure of its existing fleet. Diablo Canyon has now received a five-year life extension, and Holtec is petitioning the Nuclear Regulatory Authority for permission to re-open the shuttered Palisades reactor in Michigan. There is no precedent for such a request, so it will be interesting to see how the regulator views it.

In November, the Global Warming Policy Foundation published my report into Prospects for nuclear energy in the UK, in which I set out a roadmap for developing the British nuclear market. I recommended:

Maximising the contribution of the legacy fleet, by extending the lives of the AGRs
Accelerating the deployment of new large-scale reactors, with the most credible technologies being the APR-1400, EPR and the Advanced Boiling Water Reactor (ABWR), with a preference for the APR-1400
Creating a streamlined regulatory framework for new technology certification, incorporating international co-operation
Developing a credible pipeline of projects to deliver new technologies in the medium term, including new nuclear technologies, such as small and advanced reactors
Developing and maintaining efficient supply chains and workforce skills

There is a growing recognition that it will be difficult to de-carbonise electricity grids without using nuclear power, which has zero carbon dioxide emissions in operation and, importantly, does not rely on the weather. In the absence of long-duration storage, there are no other credible routes to de-carbonisation for most countries (particularly those without extensive hydro-electric resources).

Various countries in Europe have announced plans for new reactors including the UK, France, Sweden, the Netherlands, Hungary, Czechia, Poland, Slovakia and Romania. Japan continues to re-start reactors closed in the wake of Fukushima and has just lifted a ban on Tokyo Electric Power Company’s operation of the Kashiwazaki Kariwa power plant, the largest nuclear plant in the world. The plant still needs the permission of local authorities to re-open, but this is a major step towards that goal. By September, Japan had re-started 12 reactors.

However, Germany closed its last three nuclear reactors in 2023, but is looking increasingly isolated, as it stepped up coal-burn to replace the lost capacity. Bizarrely, Spain has just decided to follow suit, but not until 2035, so there’s time for a change of heart.

Policy-driven security of supply concerns

The Ukraine war sparked major concerns over the security of gas supplied in Europe. While the UK bought little gas from Russia and was easily able to replace these volumes, it was harder for the EU, although it was successful in securing alternative supplies from the US.

In April, the EU launched a collective gas buying platform which allowed registered gas buyers to place orders which were matched with suppliers in organised aggregation rounds. Matched companies then negotiate contracts without the involvement of the Commission. Larger companies can act as buyers on behalf of smaller companies or offer services such as shipping. The first demand aggregation round took place in May, however it is difficult to judge the success of the platform since companies are not obliged to enter into a contract if matched, nor are they required to publish the outcome of their negotiations.

In September, the EU proposed making the scheme permanent – companies would permanently have the option to buy fuel jointly. While participation would be voluntary, joint buying could become mandatory if the EU faced a fuel supply crisis, to avoid EU countries competing for the same scarce volumes.

In 2022 the EU also put in place targets for filling gas storage facilities ahead of winter. A mild winter 22/23 meant that inventories were less depleted than usual at the start of the 2023 injection season, and storage targets were met by the winter, with facilities being essentially full by November.

Despite the reduction in gas prices during 2023, demand for gas continued to fall across the EU, being 5% lower than in 2022 and 7% below the 5-year average. Most of this demand destruction was from industry and the power sector, but there was some reduction seen in the domestic sector. The power sector was boosted by increased deployment of renewables plus a recovery in hydro generation after water shortages in 2023. Fossil fuel generation was down 23% year-on-year and 30% below the 5-year average.

ICIS expects some demand recovery in European power in 2024, but there are signs some of the demand destruction will be permanent, with likely negative economic effects. As renewable deployment continues to increase, the company expects fossil generation to continue to decline, however, margins on coal generation are currently better than those for gas, coal is likely to dominate the fossil fuel generation mix. Clean dark spreads have also been favourable in the UK, but with only one coal power station remaining, the UK market continues to be dominated by gas-fired generation.

There have been some interesting developments around trading liquidity. UK power markets have seen liquidity collapse in recent years as a result of the combined effect of subsidies (particularly the Contracts for Difference scheme) and the retail price cap, which has forced suppliers into very short term hedging. Term liquidity has more or less vanished. Utility hedging is also falling in Europe as high financing costs (margin and collateral requirements) have made it more expensive to hold positions and tied up more capital than in the past. This caused utilities to reduce the speed and extent of forward hedging. Negative clean spark spreads also dis-incentivised them from selling out baseload exposures.

Open interest on the Year+1 power contract in Germany, historically the most liquid European power market, fell 5% in 2023 and the Year+2 fell by 16%. With a move towards more CfD style subsidies in the EU, power market liquidity can be expected to fall further in the coming years.

During the year another major conflict broke out when the terrorist organisation Hamas launched a major attack on Israel, sparking a new war in the Middle East. Initially this caused oil prices to spike, but they have since declined below pre-war levels as markets came to believe contagion would be limited, and so far the conflict has had minimal impact on supplies. However, with recent attacks on shipping in the region, it is far from clear that the war will remain contained, not least with attacks by Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen. The situation remains volatile and could yet have a wider impact on global oil and gas prices.

Longer-term, more structural security of supply concerns are also rising up the political agenda. Back in April, the lawmakers on the US House Energy and Commerce Committee wrote to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”) saying:

“Blackouts, brownouts, and energy rationing have become far too common in the past few years. The primary cause of the electricity shortages Americans have experienced in recent history is a lack of generation capacity…These shortages often happen in the cold of winter or the heat of summer. This is due, in no small part, to the premature retirement of dispatchable generation resources, like coal, nuclear, and natural gas, and the rapid expansion of intermittent resources, like wind and solar, onto the bulk power system.”

I described this, and subsequent warnings in September (Hope is not an acceptable strategy: new policy risks US electricity shortfalls). The North American Electric Reliability Corporation (“NERC”) has repeatedly warned of both summer and winter shortfalls, and in its recent 10-year outlook says that “sharp increases in peak demand forecasts and the potential for higher generator retirements are raising concerns for electric reliability over the next 10 years”.

Regulators and law-makers share concerns that various Biden Administration policies, including new Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) power-plant emissions standards will effectively dismantle baseload coal and gas capacity by 2030, while utilities have announced plans to retire more than 40% of the remaining US coal fleet by 2030. They worry that planned renewable capacity will not be delivered fast enough, and even if it is, reliability would be undermined by lack of adequate means to manage intermittency.

Since 2000, the US has retired over 100 GW of coal capacity while adding almost 200 GW of renewables over the same period, however while 100 GW coal capacity delivers 100 GW of capacity, 200 GW of renewables, only delivers an equivalent of about 40 GW of capacity once intermittency is taken into account.

With blackout risks in the US now affecting both summer and winter months, this is another topic which is not going away.

source – Watt-Logic

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ENB #171 Ralph Rodriquez, Energy Ninja – A fun conversation about “Aligning Energy with Grid Capacity”

Energy News Beat

LinkedIn is fun for getting to know other people and energy industry leaders. Ralph Rodriquez is a perfect example. He had never been on a podcast, and we had an absolute blast.

And anytime you can develop several T-shirt slogans, you know it will be a fun podcast. If we can’t make fun of ourselves and the Energy Transition, we can’t enjoy trying to solve global energy poverty. Like one T-Shirt: “Does this Carbon Footprint make my As# Look Big?”.

Please follow Ralph on his LinkedIn here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/energyninja/

*Please note his LinkedIn URL: energyninja. I should have realized I was being set up for a fun interview.

00:00 – Intro

02:53 – Legend Energy Advisors Ralph Rodriguez, discusses transparency in wholesale energy markets and shares a success story of a Texas mining operation’s profits during market volatility.

05:49 – Importance of data in managing labor and energy costs, achieving a 30% energy cost reduction in a NYC building, and providing real-time carbon footprint data.

11:15 – Addressing energy efficiency amidst upcoming carbon taxes, advocating for businesses to engage in discussions and implement strategies to reduce carbon footprints.

15:44 – Humor, authenticity, and proactive engagement in addressing regulatory challenges, emphasizing the need for businesses to track and reduce carbon footprints.

20:40 – Navigating LinkedIn challenges, discussing AI’s evolving role in software platforms, and highlighting real-time energy analytics in diverse industries.

25:35 – Challenges of energy management amid increasing power demands, rising costs, and potential blackouts, stressing the importance of real-time energy analytics.

32:48 – Increasing focus on data centers and commercial real estate in Q4, emphasizing integrated solutions for minimizing environmental footprints and teasing the idea of T-shirt entrepreneurship.

35:09 – Outro

Give us your thoughts on the T-shirt design – We had others that the staff put together but HR canned them.

 

 

Stuart   Turley [00:00:03] Hello, everybody. Welcome to the Energy News Beat podcast. My name’s Stu Turley, president CEO of the Sandstone Group. We got some serious energy problems in the United States. There’s a couple of other ways that we can save it. We can either lower the price of energy or we can have a little bit of better management and actually reduce what we use. And better yet, how do you know if you’re even using what how do you reduce what you don’t know? I’ve got a special guest here. I’ve got Ralph Rodrigues, and he is over at Legend Energy Advisors. And we’ve been chit chat and a little bit of inside baseball about Ralph. Ralph and I have been beating each other up on LinkedIn and that’s how we met. I want to give a shout out to LinkedIn and Ralph for putting up with me on LinkedIn because we’ve had fun poking at each other and we’ve also been talking about his black belt in Jiu Jitsu jujitsu, and that’s my Texas Oklahoma accent coming out. And we have had an absolute blast talking about my black belt in Taekwondo and how badly I got beat up. Well, Ralph, thank you for stopping by the podcast.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:01:24] And Stu, thanks so much for having me. I sincerely appreciate the opportunity and and look forward to having this discussion. And hopefully you all beat me up with your taekwondo over the, the, the airways here.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:01:39] Oh, I got so beat up. You know, we never had any discipline problems in my house because my son and my daughter both just went ballistic on it. And my son, when he hit 16, just would be the snot and I would crack. When I got out of bed the next morning and my wife would lean over and she goes, He beat you up again. Did Ning and I. Yeah, he did. So I my son, if you’re listening. Oh, you know how to hurt me.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:02:13] Well, it’s kind of. It’s kind of disgusting that that the older you get you sometimes the stories of how you hurt or how you got hurt don’t really. They’re not as exciting. You know, it’s kind of like, hey, I rolled out of bed this morning, you know what I mean? And somehow I ended up with a crack in my neck, you know?

 

Stuart   Turley [00:02:31] Oh, yeah. And I, you know, you and I were talking about being married, and I’ve been married 37 years, and I believing she has got a 37 years. One of those was a good year. But you also had a few things about being married. Men understand this, but we also don’t understand turning the lights out. Ralph And we’re sitting here and you tell us a little bit about what you do because you got a weird company that is really involved in all types of energy. Tell us what you got going on over there.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:03:05] Yeah, so so interestingly enough, Legend Energy Advisors founder and CEO Dan Crosby used to work for, you know, he used to manage national accounts actually for one of the largest brokerage houses in the country. And he had challenges. You know, he would need to talk to people, you know, his clients, and they’d reach out to him and they’d say, man, my bill, you know, it’s like twice as much as it was, you know, the month before what happened. And he’d look at him and say, Well, you use twice as much energy. And, you know, obviously they were like, not satisfied with that answer. Neither was Dan. He really struggled with that and later decided that, you know, that space was really challenging because those people are not really there to help them understand how they’re using or metabolizing energy. Right. And so it it was an, you know, an interesting transition for him because he he wanted to to really kind of help them understand how they were using that energy. And the only way to do that is by having complete transparency in the wholesale energy markets, you know, and understanding how they’re using that energy.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:04:19] Right. And so when you get your bill and you don’t realize that $2 was your hot water heater and then, you know, or $1.95, and then all of a sudden in Texas, was it two years ago, the thousand dollars a kilowatt hour or whatever it was.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:04:37] As you say, it’s insane, right? I mean, the the mark I mean, whenever those challenges come, there’s people that still got to keep cranking their businesses. And so some people are taking advantage of that. And it’s the ones that are actively participating in the energy markets. And they can really only do that by, you know, by operating in real time, you know, And so so we’ve had some clients actually, which was into. Fittingly enough that you mention that we have we had a mining client in in Texas that was one of the was the only operational mine during that time and literally just made millions of dollars just in a couple of days.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:05:20] Yeah. How do you put that one by your wife? Hello, honey. Our bill went to, you know, $20,000. Oops.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:05:28] You don’t. You don’t. You don’t.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:05:33] But both you and I, we get our head shoveled in the back of a head so hard our eyeballs would fall out. Absolutely. Absolutely. And but now when we sit back and take a look at your software that you have the balance out and track the information. We were talking about data and as a CEO, if you’re trying to run a company and you got to look out for labor and energy, are some of your biggest costs that you have to try to manage as a, you know, type of a business owner. So what can you guys do as far as what are your thoughts on how to you don’t know what you’re going to save if you don’t know what how to do it. I mean. Right.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:06:16] Exactly. It’s like you don’t know. It’s like that old question. You don’t know what you don’t know. So it’s like, you know, but but then you have to convince somebody to take the step to try to understand what you don’t know. And sometimes bridging that gap is really challenging. Right? But but the key is really an understanding that there’s three components that when they work together, really makes the ability for decision makers to understand how they’re using energy and how to how to improve efficiency. Because really, at the end of the day. Whether you’re trying to save the environment or whether your goal is to save money. Efficiency is really the driver for both of those items, right? So so the key is in those three components is, is having a, you know, an advisor that does market intelligence, that understands and has the highest level market intelligence, but can apply that with the type of analytics platform like like our legend analytics platform, which aggregates and, you know, and extrapolates the data seamlessly. And and it’s actually auditable data, but then also understanding the infrastructure component. Because when you work all those three things together, you can optimize the efficiency and it just really improves how you’re operating as a business. And, and you know, we’re doing some really, really interesting things where we’re helping people in some ways that are really, really significant.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:07:47] Give us a few examples.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:07:49] Yeah. So, so one of our clients in New York City is a 60 story building. And, you know, we we started implementing our platform and and our technology and the expertise within our organization because those three silos actually have different people that had. Oh, yes. And so their ability to dynamically work together to, to to kind of integrate those solutions to understand is really improved efficiency in ways that are like incredible. I mean, that building is, is some 30%. You know, they spend some 30% less on their energy bills than they did previously. And one of the cool things is that because because we do real time analytics is, is they’re able to actually have a real time are their clients or are able to have a real time carbon footprint.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:08:47] Wow.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:08:48] Their product, which is something that’s really different. I mean, we do that in hotels too, where we’re a client, you know, when they’re on their way out, you know, they can get their statement and it gives them the carbon footprint right there, which is something that’s really different.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:09:03] Oh, man, that is extremely different. And when you sit back and kind of think as a CEO, you’re responsible to your investors and your stakeholders and you’re sitting here and you’ve got new things coming around the corner. If you don’t have auditable information, you could be in trouble. And that’s one of the things that bothers me about the tax, the excuse me, the carbon tax. Regulatory regulatory issues coming around the corner is you you almost have to look at your data as a defense shield because if you don’t have the data, it’s kind of like the IRS showing up at your doorstep. You almost have to prove that you’re innocent.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:09:49] Yeah. So take it one step further and I can tell you that that we’ve had experience because we engage with really, you know, a lot of energy, intense businesses across almost every sector, including oil and gas, by the way. I mean, some of our clients are some of the largest oil and gas companies in North America. And and we can tell you specifically that there’s a significant amount of of overreporting and underreporting. And so that’s really, you know, by virtue of of using like Excel Excel spreadsheets to, you know, to input your data. And it just requires manpower. It’s prone to error. And in the age of AI, it’s like, man, you really got to advance, you know, to the next level. And so, you know, I feel fortunate that I’m a part of Legend Energy Advisors because, you know, our founder and CEO is is really and truly a visionary. I mean, he’s so far ahead of every, you know, in his thought process and and the solutions. And, you know, it makes it easy for me, you know, as a business development sales type person, when you have a product and services that are solving real world problems. Man Yeah, there’s no better feeling than that. It’s it’s an easy sale. The hardest part for me is just getting the meetings, you know.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:11:15] I’m yeah, I can understand that. It’s all about thought leadership and people want to buy from somebody that they won’t they know and that you’re not trying to sell them a bit bill of goods, but when you’re trying to save them money and protect them from the government, as far as the carbon taxes that are coming on and everything else that’s really not selling, that’s saving your clients, that’s kind of cool.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:11:38] Yeah, it really is. And a lot of people don’t really understand. I mean, there’s there’s some are they haven’t really resonated with the idea yet. But like local law 97 in New York, you know that law is actually I mean it’s you know it’s common. And so there’s significant penalties for your carbon footprint, you know, like, you know, for your reporting initiatives and whatnot. If you’re not reducing those carbon footprint, you’re going to pay. And so the question is, is do you go ahead and suck it up and try to pay earlier and start developing some strategies to improve your efficiency or do you wait until the penalties come down the pike and then everybody’s already jammed up and doesn’t really have enough time to, you know, to contend with with you because they’re busy, you know, So, you know, kind of like the, you know, it’s it’s some challenging times coming ahead. But New York’s in for a rude awakening Vancouver is to.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:12:40] What’s going on there?

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:12:41] Same, same type of initiative for Vancouver. And and I promise you, it’s coming to to a city near you. So, you know us in Dallas, you know, it’s it’s it’s coming to Dallas, too. I mean maybe later than than, you know, the others. But but it’s definitely coming. We need to be prepared for it.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:13:00] Oh, my goodness.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:13:01] I think I think at the end of the day, it’s really, really important to engage in the discussions, even if you’re not making a decision. I find that the I like the people in those industries and engage with them and start having those difficult discussions so that you can figure out what your pathway is forward.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:13:20] Right. You know, Ralph and I appreciate exactly what you just said, because the discussion on my end is talking to people around the world and we’re talking about the energy crisis. And that’s why when you and I were just chatting about this, very rarely does anybody talk about how do you save energy, how do you actually do that? And it’s kind of refreshing. And but, you know, I’m going to I’m going to put this as a T-shirt. I think you and I need to, like, get this T-shirt out.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:13:53] Because we need to collaborate together.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:13:56] Yeah, we got to get a T-shirt out there that says, Does my carbon footprint make my ass look big? Because I think we ought to do that.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:14:05] Well, I don’t tell you.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:14:06] Though. Don’t tell my wife, because you and I were chatting. You know, the worst words as a husband that you could ever say is you here. Does this dress make me look fat? And you go, you know, you’re you know, you’re getting me.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:14:23] So I can tell you that I, you know, that during those times, as well as when my wife figures out that I’m really hard of hearing, you know, And so I’m starting. Yeah, I’m here. And at that point in time and my attention span is shorter, so you get my drift.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:14:42] All right, Mr. Producer, I’d love for you to mark down time on this for our art department to come up with a t shirt that says, Does this carbon footprint make my ass look that big? That is a t shirt. I just made that up.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:15:00] That’s great. That’s a great concept that I’d wear. I’d wear it all the time, I promise.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:15:09] You know, there’s so much. I’m sitting here thinking about this. We could sit there and you could have somebody and have the shade off of their backside, you know? And yeah, I mean.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:15:20] I’m thinking you’ve already had these ideas.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:15:24] Brainstorming. Oh, I swear I haven’t. I swear. That’s why this is so funny is I can barely even keep myself. And speaking of the devil here, my wife. My wife is texting me on the phone, so I’m over here going.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:15:38] Yes, this. That’s so funny.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:15:42] That. Oh, no. But, you know, as we sit here and we talk about this, it’s getting the word out there and and really doing what you’re doing. I want to give you a shout out on what you’re doing on LinkedIn. And I like your posts. I like your inter activeness on there. And that’s what got us chit chatting. And you even poked fun at me a few times and I absolutely love it. I love anybody poking fun at me. I can’t remember which one it was, but it was like, you’re a dope or something. I can’t remember what it was absolutely a wonderful I was like, All right.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:16:20] You know, you got to be real, right? If you’re not authentic, then then what’s the purpose?

 

Stuart   Turley [00:16:25] Oh, yeah, but it helps. And I think that that’s part of society that we’re not doing right now. And that is humor is amazing. And I appreciate what you’re doing, trying to educate people out there because your posts are very, very good. So everybody needs to follow. Ralph Rodriguez l e d a p o m Now, what is that mean? Because I’m over here going, That’s a lot of initials behind your name there.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:16:57] Yeah, that’s the lead operations and management certification.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:17:02] Okay.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:17:03] From the from the Green Building Institute.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:17:06] Oh, nice.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:17:07] Yeah. So, so it’s just a certification for Leed, for Leed buildings. And, you know, there’s a lot of people that follow different frameworks. Okay. Would they try to use to, to, to improve operationally? And there’s, you know, sustainability initiatives and that’s one of them.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:17:25] I was I was hoping that that was some way to make a husband sounds, you know, listen to his wife a little more. But I’m glad it’s that it’s something.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:17:33] Like Yeah, but it’s not but but I’ll tell you what, it sure does make me feel important.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:17:41] I am so glad my wife is not standing over my shoulder and she has come up behind me and I’m like, All I can see is this hand come in from behind my head. Whack. Yeah.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:17:55] So I’m like, I can.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:17:57] Relax out of the city because this is a huge problem. Getting back to the the regulatory issues coming around the corner. I I’ve seen some horrific regulations coming around the corner and I applaud your comment. For our podcast listeners, when Ralph said that I my eyebrow my unibrow went up because I was absolutely like, wait a minute, if you don’t start tracking it now, what happens when the fines come in? Holy smokes, that’s frightening.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:18:33] Yeah. And you know, the truth is, is there then they’re no joke. I mean, these are significant fines. And I’ll tell you, I mean, right now, with this whole push on the green economy and the world’s, you know, up in arms, you know, they’re looking for capacity at these data center AI exploding.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:18:52] Right.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:18:53] The need for energy density is so critical. And and, you know, carbon and capital pretty much become inextricably linked. I mean, so so there’s really nothing that you can do to get away from that. So knowing that there’s a future day of reckoning, for lack of a better term, you know, it makes sense that you investigate the options available to you right before they literally cripple your business. You know, and and, you know, it’s it’s going to happen and there’s going to be winners and losers just like everything else. And I think the the the companies that are being proactive, that are focusing on on their sustainability initiatives and their carbon footprint is is critical. But but there’s one other issue, and that is, you know, that that the reporting frameworks out there, I mean, it’s like the Wild West out there, you know? Right. I mean, there’s a gazillion, you know, reporting frameworks. And so it it’s it’s like what, you know, what framework do I do You Well, you know what? That’s the beauty of our platform and how our platform works is we don’t really care. We’re word framework agnostic, you know, I like that, you know, so it just makes sense. And, and you just want to, you know, you want to start somewhere so many people are so hung up on what’s the upfront investment and they get bogged down with the fear that the numbers are astronomical without even jumping in and doing any of the research, you know, or investigating, you know, the opportunities with the top level advisors out there, you know? So that’s my take on that.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:20:38] Well, you know, I’m always looking at a return on investment. I get hit up so many times on even LinkedIn or anything else for people trying to sell things to my company. And and it’s just brutal. In fact, I had Joan Rivers, I think she came up from the dead the other day and it just adds. Unbelievable. Unbelievable. I saw.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:21:04] That. And I thought to myself, man, what is this world coming to?

 

Stuart   Turley [00:21:09] And I was like, And Steve Reese, I love Steve Reese. He’s a true industry leader out there. And he’s like, I believe it was him. And Marilyn Monroe had been chasing him for years. LinkedIn has got to get some better controls on these fake accounts coming in and somebody using I think.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:21:33] Right. There may be bots, you know, that are like I mean, it’s insane really. I mean, I can’t tell you how many that I get. I mean, it’s just crazy. But I’ve never gotten Joan Rivers, so I, I think that you’re winning. You’re taking the cake on this one.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:21:48] Oh, it was. It was funny. I had to bring my wife over and go, Hey, Joel, tomorrow, you know? And I really got tickled at that. Now back to a I. And when we sit here and think about A.I., it drives me nuts. Ralph, when I sit here and I know that I’ve used software packages, they they are going to remain nameless. But then all of a sudden, in the last six months to a year, they’ve gone. We’re a I know you’re not you’re a glorified spreadsheet, you know, And I’m over here going when it’s ready. You saying to your clients when they ask that kind of a thing. Right.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:22:30] Well, the thing is, is that, you know, the the the A.I. is really advancing the ability for these companies to really advance their techniques in a right substantive. And so I can see where those platforms are making progress and they’re using A.I. and but I think we’re just barely scratching the surface on it. You know, I mean, I think that the real learning and the real momentum of the A.I. programs is yet to come. The beauty is, is like, you know, with our labs and analytics platform, just, you know, the shameless plug again, is, is that we developed that platform over the last 6 or 7 years and some of the most tough environments that are out there.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:23:16] Right.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:23:17] And so, you know, we’ve been, you know, dealing with developing that technology and and now with, you know, with the push on AI, we’re on some iterations that are down the road already. So we you know, and it’s based on experience, right? I mean, the fact that we’re in you know, we’re in automobile manufacturing plants, we’re in poultry processing plants, we’re in, you know, mine the mining industry, as.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:23:47] You say, Holstein processing plants.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:23:50] No poultry.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:23:51] Whole poultry. Oh, I thought you were like, man.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:23:54] Like chicken processing plants. And and I mean, there’s we’ve got that’s cool interesting stories you know with with our platform and what that data does because when you can provide data to the people that are on the ground floor of those companies that are right, those are the people that understand their business better than anybody. Right? Isn’t that.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:24:14] Great?

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:24:15] So when they see the data, they can make adjustments that you wouldn’t I mean, we couldn’t have even anticipated some of the things that they came up with. And it was all based on the data that came through. And really, that’s all all because, you know, it’s teaching you how to think through these different scenarios and right now understand real time analytics and and apply, you know, make make those decisions that you make, you know, actionable and accountable.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:24:44] I like that. Actionable, accountable and auditable.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:24:49] It’s like a lot of like, it’s a lot of eyes.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:24:52] It is.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:24:53] That’s what my wife got me. That’s the front of the T-shirt. Yeah.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:24:57] Yeah. There you go. I’m sorry. That T-shirt is. I’ve just. You know, you should have mentioned t T-shirt again, because just like a squirrel Squirrel. I got another couple about four more T-shirts on this. We’re going to open up a merch shop. So because it came on this podcast, we’re going to have to cut you in on some of the merch sales that come out of this teacher or.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:25:19] You be an evangelist for I’ll be an evangelist for it, I promise you we’ll sell a bunch of them.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:25:26] That is a funny T-shirt line. I’m serious. That’s going to be part of the headline of this podcast. I love it. I think it should be. So what advice do you have for folks that are actually sitting here looking at a crisis? And let me let me back this up for just one other question here. Governor Holcomb just put out a notice two months ago saying that the New York is going to increase their power by 20% this year and then the bills are going to be increased 20% next year. And within 3 to 4 years, it’s going to go to 100% more than that. So not only is the car, the carbon footprint, does this carbon footprint make my butt look big? I’m sorry. I just got to get back there again. We’re going to have so much fun. And then when you take a look at the fact that that carbon footprint is going to make your butt look big, it’s also going to have a lot of your cost for the energy is coming up. We’re also having blackouts starting to roll through. So I’m asking this from a technical standpoint on as a grid operator, the grid operators have to keep up a balanced load and they have to have the balancing authorities throw it between, you know, the renewables, especially up in New York or those other areas. And they have to say, hey, I got a base load here. I got to have these things spinning up. At what level do the car plants or the other big plants that you have start communicating with the power grid, you know, going both ways and saying this is the load that I have now going this way to help those poor balancing authorities sit there and try to balance that out. Does that make sense? Because now we’re talking with a guy coming back and forth, preplanning. The load would make a big difference to that grid operator because now we’re sitting here and there are announcements all around the world. The UK this morning put out the get ready for gigantic amounts of power outages. Our grid facility in the U.S., the f e r c has already put out and said, oh, by the way, retro, we’re going to have blackouts because of the grid management and in hooking things to the grid that shouldn’t have. But would that be a great play for your software to in invest or a forward path? Because if you think about a plant and am I thinking about that right?

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:28:19] Yeah, you are. Because because here’s here’s the thing. Everything is advancing so fast in the industry. And particularly, you know, I know that we had a discussion previously about we’re involved in the datacenter space a lot, right? Granted, we did do podcast recently, give a shout out to the data center frontier and also at a center along with both of those too, where they had asked us to do a podcast and our CEO and founder Excuse you.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:28:48] Thank you.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:28:51] Now so, so, so you know, our our you know, those companies actually asked us to do the podcast, asked our CEO and founder to get on there and kind of right some of the difficulties from the constraint side and power, you know, stranded power, right cetera, etc.. And we’re getting I mean, we’re literally getting phone calls every day on I’m trying to improve and and collaborate. Yeah, well, stay ahead of the curve. And I think ultimately what you’re talking about is leveraging the technology in a way where where you can manage, you know, the energy dynamically. Right. What do you need to do to kind of control, you know, the different aspects, the infrastructure, you know, where are the you know, and then even even across grid, from grid to grid, you know, And so all those things are coming. And I think you now you’re starting to get the smartest people, you know, on the planet that understand energy way, way better than I do. They’re focused on trying to solve those pieces of the puzzle. But one element, it’s critical and it’s always going to be critical is real time energy analytics. And so if you’re not really understanding in granularity how you’re using that energy, you you’re not going to end in real time. You’re not going to be able to effectively, you know, provide the correct information that you need to become an active participate an active participant in the energy market.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:30:27] That’s nuts. I mean.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:30:28] That’s a big deal because at the end of the day, energy density is is king.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:30:34] Exactly.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:30:35] With all these energy intense businesses, you know, it’s just it’s critical. So people need to be focused on it.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:30:42] Yeah. I mean, Alex Epstein, who I’ve interviewed twice, he said there is no advanced country that didn’t get here without fossil fuels and energy density. You just nailed it there. And Germany, who is how the Germany goes in their economy, goes the EU, and they’re in trouble because of their energy density. They went to the wind and that natural gas they got into war over, you know, in the Nord Stream pipeline with Russia is now gone. BMW or Volkswagen shut their plant down. The oldest steel mill in Europe closed down. BASF has moved to China. They closed their fertilizer plants down. Countries die because of not having the energy density. So if you don’t understand, if you don’t understand the energy density, you’re going to die. I guess we can’t put the fear. That could be a T-shirt for your company, man.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:31:48] Like, we got all kinds of t shirts, like ideas come, and we’re going to be. We’re going to be t shirt, t shirt tycoon or, like, forget this energy stuff.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:31:58] Let’s Oh, yeah. You know, let’s get your CEO on here. And then that way we can you can get him on here for a fun podcast. We can’t let those data center guys get all the fun with your CEO. We got we’re going to be more fun than the CEO.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:32:15] Let’s do it. I mean, he’s he’s all over it. I mean, this you know, he’s he’s exceptional. I mean, really, he’s like next level of podcaster. I mean, if you ever watch any of the podcast that he’s done. His level of knowledge is is like exceptional. And he would have the foresight to be able to, like, know, hey, these are the things that are happening. These are the things that we got to do. He’s he’s all over it. So.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:32:40] Well, this would be fabulous. You know, you and I, this was almost a personal but it was a great energy discussion. And so we got about one more minute here. Ralph, what is coming around the corner for you? What do you see for Q4?

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:33:00] Oh, so right now, what’s what’s really ramping up is, is is, you know, the data center space, the commercial real estate space because of the local dollar 97. So, you know, smart metering is really important, but there’s a lot of out of the box, you know, solutions that that really are not going to solve people’s problem. So so it’s it’s tricky. You know, I mean, those shelf technologies, they really you know. They don’t operate as efficiently as they should. And so. So you really need somebody that’s like crossing over those silos that we were talking about, you know, so that they can integrate the strategy and help you really minimize your footprint. And that’s what we’re doing across the board. And that’s the beauty is, is we didn’t create a software for for four for one factory or or, you know, for a particular type of business, which a lot of these solutions, that’s what they do. Our solution literally works in every single category across every sector. And it’s really solving real world problems. And at the end of the day, that’s what matters.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:34:07] How cool is that? And people can find you on Ralph Rodriguez on LinkedIn. And we will have your contact information and your company’s Web site out there all in the show notes. And I can’t wait to visit with you and your CEO. I think that would be an absolute.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:34:26] And maybe some.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:34:28] Unless he watches this and he realizes he’s going to fire you and me for having such a great conversation.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:34:35] I’m not sure that it really matters because we’re going to be T-shirt tycoons who really matter. Man.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:34:42] Let’s go to rock n roll. So for that, we’ve been the energy news beat t shirt. And at least, Ralph, it’s not a wet T-shirt contest.

 

Ralph Rodriguez [00:34:54] No, I wouldn’t want to see mine. You do have the skinny filter on me right now.

 

Stuart   Turley [00:34:58] Oh, yeah, But you got the hair for all our podcast listeners. He has a great looking set of hair. I got flesh colored. I’m a little bit thin on the skin out there. So with that, thank you for stopping by The Energy News Beat podcast. My name’s do Turley and I will see you real soon. Thank you.

 

The post ENB #171 Ralph Rodriquez, Energy Ninja – A fun conversation about “Aligning Energy with Grid Capacity” appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Central Banks Brought Inflation. Now they Bring Stagnation.

Energy News Beat

Although the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank’s message regarding interest rate cuts seems clear, reiterating their commitment to reducing inflation, the market is expecting between five and six interest rate cuts, between 125 and 150 basis points, in the next twelve months.

This shows us the bubble bias of many investors. We live in a world where two generations of market participants have only seen rate cuts and massive liquidity injections. Central banks have created huge perverse incentives in markets that should have been prevented if they truly followed their mandate of stable prices. On top of it, the ECB faces another risk. It must avoid following the siren calls of interventionists if it wants the euro project to survive.

The euro is the biggest monetary success of the last 100 years, and the ECB’s excessively loose policy may destroy its position as a world reserve currency. The interventionist hordes of European socialism want the central bank to become an instrument in the hands of governments to nationalize the economy and destroy the currency’s purchasing power.

Don’t be mistaken; for those who come up with soft words demanding “expansive-looking monetary policy,” what they are looking for is exactly what they have supported in Argentina, Venezuela, and Cuba: the expropriation of wealth through the dissolution of the purchasing power of the currency.

It would be completely irresponsible to implement massive rate cuts for several reasons.

Central banks are placing all the focus on the price and not the quantity of money. Ignoring monetary aggregates is very dangerous, and centering decisions only on rates may create a larger problem: a market bubble and a real economy contraction.

By ignoring monetary aggregates, central banks may cut rates with no real effect on the productive economy and solve nothing. There may be a significant contraction in economic activity even if rates decline, as credit availability worsens even with declining rates, but markets keep inflating the financial bubble.

Inflation has not declined persistently. Since the consumer price index is a year-on-year calculation from a very high figure, the base effect accounts for up to 85% of the decline in inflation. The same base effect could adversely affect inflation in the coming months if the annual path of price rises remains.

The greatest economic aberration of our time, negative interest rates, actually made the structural weakness in the economy worse, causing it to slow down.

The economy has been accumulating poor and indebted growth data for years in which misguided so-called “expansive” monetary policies have been implemented. Negative rates and extreme liquidity injection have not generated greater or better growth but have left states with enormous imbalances.

Consumers are still suffering from the monetary disaster created in 2020. We are talking about a cumulative inflation rate of more than 22% since 2018 and a price rise that continues to be worrying, particularly in non-replaceable goods.

Monetary aggregates show that there is a private sector recession disguised by accumulated debt. Between January 2020 and July 2022, the money supply (M2) soared by an insane $6.3 trillion, according to FRED. It has declined almost a trillion dollars from its peak. The impact of this decline in money supply on the availability of credit and the broad economy will not be evident until 2024, when it coincides with an enormous wall of debt maturities. Central banks went from excess money to overlooking the money slump. Both are equally negative. One created the inflation burst, and the second is driving a private sector recession disguised by debt.

Inflation is a monetary effect. What some call cost inflation, commodity inflation, or supply shock is nothing more than more units of issued currency than real economic growth going to relatively scarce assets. Unit prices may rise for exogenous reasons, but they do not generate a sustained and cumulative rise in aggregate prices, which is what measures inflation. If a price soars due to an exogenous factor, the rest of the price does not rise at once if the currency issued remains constant relative to economic growth.

Of course, the system creates a whole series of experts who blame inflation on everything and anyone except for the only thing that can make aggregate prices rise at once, consolidate that annual burst, and continue to rise: the decrease in the purchasing power of the currency.

Those who understand money predict inflation and warn of the current risk. From Steve Hanke’s articles and the Inflation Dashboard that accurately predicted the inflation eruption of 2021–22, Richard Burdekin, “The U.S. Money Explosion of 2020: Monetarism and Inflation” (2020), to Claudio Borio, “Does money growth help explain the recent inflation surge?” (2023), or Juan Castañeda and Tim Congdon, “Inflation, The Next Threat?” (2020), dozens of studies warned of the arrival of inflation by excess monetary and explained the empirically monetary cause. Some argue that in 2009–2019 there was no inflation and money was also printed massively, but they do not understand the quantitative theory of money and ignore that the monetary expansion of 2020–22 was up to five times greater than that of the previous period of stimulus plans, as well as fully dedicated to government spending programs.

If we look at the contraction of monetary aggregates, inflation should have dropped faster, and the economy would be in a recession. However, the accumulated effect of massive money growth added to an unstoppable debt-fueled government deficit makes the impact of the 2020–21 liquidity explosion disguise the risks.

Inflation was created by the wrong monetary policy, and incorrect central bank measures may have lasting negative impacts on the economy. The first effect is evident: governments continue to crowd out the real economy, and families and businesses suffer the entire burden of rate hikes. Maybe the objective was always to increase the size of the public sector at any cost and implement a gradual nationalization of the economy.

Market participants should stop encouraging bubble-generating policies, and central banks should focus on monetary aggregates to avoid boom and bust cycles. The negative effects of the current money slump may arrive at once with the wall of maturities. Even if we avoid a recession, it will likely be a false way out with a debt-bloated government consumption figure, weak productivity, and private sector growth.

The post Central Banks Brought Inflation. Now they Bring Stagnation. appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Report: Rush for ‘clean energy’ minerals in Africa risks repeating harmful extractivist model

Energy News Beat

The nonprofit Global Witness investigated lithium mining projects in Zimbabwe, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Namibia, which appear to reproduce the same model of extractivism that has impoverished African countries for centuries.
In March, residents of the Namibian town of Uis took to the streets to protest the activities of Chinese miner Xinfeng, alleging the company was carrying out large-scale industrial mining without the proper permits or social license.
In Zimbabwe, activist Farai Maguwu from the Centre for Natural Resource Governance described a similar experience of exclusion and exploitation at Chinese miner Sinomine’s Bikita lithium operation, calling it “typical extractivism.”
One of the ways to prevent exploitation is to shut out companies that “socialize the costs and privatize the profits,” Maguwu said, adding he remains hopeful that encouraging competition between companies from across the world is the way to ensure better outcomes for Zimbabweans.

A recent report from U.K.- and U.S.-based nonprofit Global Witness captures the details of how a new mining rush driven by demand for “clean energy” minerals can go wrong, reproducing the same model of extractivism that has impoverished African countries for centuries.

“Sheer mineral wealth hasn’t always translated into development, particularly for the communities who live next to mines,” said report author Colin Robertson, a senior investigator at Global Witness.

The team investigated mining projects for lithium, an essential mineral in the production of batteries for electric vehicles and power storage, in Zimbabwe, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Namibia. They highlighted the risk that future mining will “embed corruption, fail to develop local economies, and harm citizens and the environment.”

In January this year, residents living near Uis in western Namibia started noticing a daily convoy of trucks leaving an area they believed to simply be an artisanal mining site. The large vehicles were passing through the community on their way to the port of Walvis Bay on the country’s western shore, according to Jimmy Areseb, a community activist. In reality, the trucks were exporting minerals from an extensive operation residents knew little about. In March, people took to the streets to protest the activities of Chinese miner Xinfeng Investments, the owner of the trucks and entity extracting resources, alleging the company was carrying out large-scale industrial mining without the proper permits or social license.

A demonstration against lithium mining by Xinfeng in Uis in March this year. Image courtesy Jimmy Areseb.

Uis sits at the heart of an area of immense cultural, ecological and economic significance. The mining site falls within the expansive Tsiseb Conservancy, which supports residents through legal wildlife hunting. Ancient rock art believed to be thousands of years old lies a few kilometers from the town of Uis. These rocky outcrops also hold pegmatites, igneous rocks traditionally mined for tin, and, more recently, lithium.

In a petition, some community leaders, including Areseb, alleged that the company didn’t properly consult with community members when it appeared on the scene last year, adding that leaders of the operation bought off local chiefs to obtain permissions for their mining project. Areseb accused the government of “total negligence,” overlooking the interest of ordinary citizens in granting approvals.

Rather than bringing tangible benefits, the mining activity interferes with the breeding of wildlife like springbok, hyenas and rhinos that bring in revenue for the conservancy, he said, adding that they’re scared away by the noise from the mining operation.

“We’re not saying the company must go,” he said, adding the community just wants a seat at the table so that “we can discuss the way forward.”

According to documents reviewed by Mongabay, a Namibian company, Long Fire Investments, owned by businessman January S. Likulano, bought 10 mining claims for around $160 in total to carry out small-scale mining in the region. Only Namibian citizens can apply for small-scale mining permits, which are much cheaper than industrial mining permits issued to foreign companies. The Global Witness report cited ties between Long Fire Investments and Tangshan Xinfeng HongKong Ltd., owner of Xinfeng Investments, as evidence that the Namibian company was a front for Tangshan Xinfeng.

In an export application, Long Fire Investments requested permission to export 55,000 metric tons of lithium-rich ore valued at $32 million to Tangshan Xinfeng. Such a relationship allows the Chinese company to profit from a major lithium deposit for a pittance of its actual value while dodging the need for a proper environmental impact assessment for industrial mining by operating under small-scale mining permits.

“A company is exporting minerals worth millions. The royalty fee they pay our government is only 2%,” 28-year-old Areseb said. “We cannot allow this while the hospitals are falling apart, schools are falling apart, the roads, everything in our country is debilitated.”

Uis sits at the heart of an area of immense cultural, ecological and economic significance. Image by jbdodane via Flickr (CC BY-NC 2.0).

An assessment of Namibia’s mining code found that fiscal requirements for foreign companies, including the royalty rate of 2% for industrial mining of minerals, were hurting the government. The policy translates into low upfront revenue for the state, and isn’t designed to bring proportional benefits when the price of minerals like lithium increases on the global market, according to the assessment. Battery-grade lithium carbonate sold at $37,000 per metric ton in 2022 compared to around $6,000 per metric ton in 2012, while the royalty rate has remained unchanged since 2009. Thus, the status quo boosts miners’ profits.

Local communities and Namibian parliamentarians have also accused the company of housing workers in “apartheid conditions” while failing to deliver on promises to build processing facilities within Namibia.

In November, Xinfeng announced that it plans to launch a lithium-processing plant in Namibia in the first quarter of 2024. In an email to Mongabay, a Xinfeng representative declined to comment on the allegations or share documents proving the operation’s legitimacy. Likulano also didn’t respond to a request for comment.

In Zimbabwe, another activist, Farai Maguwu, director of the Centre for Natural Resource Governance, described a similar experience of exclusion and exploitation at the Bikita mine, calling it “typical extractivism.” In January 2022, Sinomine, a Chinese company, purchased Bikita Minerals, which operates the largest lithium mine in the Southern African nation. Following the takeover, its new owners ramped up production from 3,000 to around 10,000 metric tons a month, primarily for export to China and Japan, according to a report in the Reuters.

“The communities watch mineral-laden trucks leaving every day, yet there is no investment in public goods, in health, education, or supporting alternative livelihoods,” Maguwu said. “[The company] are here only to loot. There is no connection with the priorities of the communities they operate in.”

In 2023, following media reports, the Zimbabwean government briefly shut down the mine, citing exploitative labor conditions.

Foreign mining companies aren’t the only ones exploiting the country’s natural resources; “sanctioned local elites” are also profiting, with the complicity of the state at the expense of citizens, according to Global Witness. In Zimbabwe’s Sandawana mine, more than a decade after production of emeralds ceased, a newly coveted mineral was discovered: lithium. Artisanal miners were the first to seize the opportunity, but the Zimbabwe Miners Federation (ZMF) soon obtained a lease for the mine.

It was set up to allow artisanal miners, who tend to be materially poor, to formally participate in and benefit from the mineral rush. ZMF’s president, Henrietta Rushwaya, is an associate of Zimbabwe’s president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, sharing ties of traditional kinship. An Al Jazeera investigation had previously linked Rushwaya with corruption and money laundering in the gold mining sector. She was convicted and fined for gold smuggling this November. The report cited the involvement of players like Rushwaya as red flags for persistent corruption in the sector.

Political elites swooping in to take advantage of lucrative opportunities is nothing new. The Global Witness report alleges the incident in Zimbabwe came at the cost of the artisanal miners, who pay to be part of the ZMF even though the body doesn’t appear to promote the interests of small miners. They’re paid lower prices for mined ore than before, even as the ZMF strikes profitable deals to export lithium. The federation didn’t respond to Mongabay’s requests for comment.

“Where the nation must benefit, it’s the leaders who are benefiting,” Maguwu said. “It’s daylight robbery of the people of Zimbabwe.” Not only do corrupt leaders corner profits from the trade, they also fail to promote sustainable development that would benefit a broader section of the populace, he said.

A lithium mining operation in Uis. Image by Luccornish via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0).

One of the ways to prevent exploitation is to shut out companies that “socialize the costs and privatize the profits,” Maguwu said. He described a situation where companies consume community water resources and pollute common water bodies during mining. The costs of these actions are borne by the communities at large, but when it comes to the profits from mineral exploitation, the companies are mainly concerned about compensating their shareholders.

“Currently, there is no competition, so the Chinese just do as they please because they are in bed with the ruling elites,” Maguwu said.

The Business & Human Rights Resource Centre notes that allegation of human rights violations, environmental harms, and labor abuses are as much present in mining operations linked to Canadian, U.S., U.K., Australian and European companies and investors as Chinese companies.

And, in some cases, competition between corporations can prove detrimental, with protracted battles paralyzing projects. In the DRC, two foreign companies are vying for control of the vast Manono lithium deposit, which could become Africa’s largest lithium mine. The project has been mired in corruption allegations and legal challenges for more than five years now. Australian company AVZ Minerals and Chinese mining behemoth Zijin Mining Group Ltd. are both vying for control of the concession, with a state-owned mining entity, Cominière, involved in alleged suspect dealings with both.

Though the Manono mine has yet to produce any lithium ore, the Global Witness report says the project may have generated about $28 million for shell companies incorporated in tax havens, windfall gains made through sales of mineral rights acquired below market price from government-controlled Cominière. Little of that money has reached either DRC government coffers or the communities living near the deposit.

AVZ did not respond to Mongabay’s requests for comment, while Zijin Mining denied allegations that it was involved in corrupt dealings with respect to the Manono project.

Despite being aware of the fraught nature of this 21st-century mineral rush, Maguwu said he remained hopeful that encouraging competition between companies worldwide is the way to ensure better outcomes for Zimbabweans through competition over favorable contracts and standards benefiting the country, with some businesses emerging as models for others.

No matter the ownership of the companies, what both Areseb and Maguwu said would benefit their countries was domestic value addition. ZimbabweNamibia and other countries have banned the export of unprocessed lithium, but it remains to be seen whether this leads to the development of domestic processing facilities and related economic benefits for local communities in these producer nations.

In one encouraging sign, Zimbabwe’s mining minister said the country’s earnings from lithium exports shot up from $70 million in the first nine months of 2022 to $209 million in the same period this year. The ban on exports of unprocessed lithium came into force in December 2022. However, export earnings accrue to companies. As long as beneficial ownership remains in the hands of foreign entities, it isn’t clear how much increased export earnings will boost domestic revenues or the lives of ordinary Zimbabweans.

“There’s an increased awareness that African countries have to take a larger share of the value chain as part of a just transition,” Robertson said. “But there’s a big risk that we’ll see more of the same pattern unless real efforts are made to do things differently during this new boom.”

Source: News.mongabay.com

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Argentina announces that it will not join BRICS bloc

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Argentina has announced that it will not join the BRICS bloc of developing economies, fulfilling a campaign promise by newly elected far-right President Javier Milei who has pledged to pursue closer ties with the West.

In a letter dated December 22 but released on Friday, Milei told the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa that the timing for Argentina’s membership in the bloc was not opportune.

Milei said in his letter that his approach to foreign affairs “differs in many aspects from that of the previous government. In this sense, some decisions made by the previous administration will be reviewed.”

Argentina’s new president, a self-described anarcho-libertarian who has pushed forward a series of radical economic reforms since taking office in December, has said that he will pursue a foreign policy that aligns with Western countries, moving away from the previous administration’s efforts to build ties with other developing countries.

Former centre-left President Alberto Fernandez had promoted Argentina’s inclusion in BRICS as a way to foster economic relations with the bloc, whose members account for about 25 percent of world GDP. Argentina had been set to join on January 1, 2024.

Reporting from the capital city of Buenos Aires, Al Jazeera correspondent Monica Yanakiew said that Milei has already issued sweeping changes during his three weeks in office.

“He has already made dramatic changes in all walks of life, from expediting divorce procedures to deregulating prices to eliminating subsidies, everything is changing here now,” she said.

During his campaign, Milei railed against countries ruled “by communism” such as China and neighbouring economic power Brazil and said he would pursue greater alignment with “free nations of the West” such as Israel and the US in his economic and foreign policy.

However, in his letter to the BRICS leaders, Milei said that Argentina would seek to “intensify bilateral ties” in order to increase “trade and investment flows” without joining the group.

Domestically, Milei is also facing substantial pushback from the country’s powerful organised labour groups as he embarks on a programme of economic “shock therapy” and deregulation as Argentina reels from sky-high inflation.

 The move is the latest shift in economic and foreign policy by newly elected hard-right President Javier Milei. 

     

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Oil prices to end year 10% lower as demand concerns snap winning streak

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CNBC

Oil prices are set to end 2023 about 10% lower, the first annual decline in two years, after geopolitical concerns, production cuts and global measures to rein in inflation triggered wild fluctuations in prices.

Source: CNBC

Brent crude futures were up 44 cents, or 0.6%, at $77.59 a barrel on Friday, the last trading day of 2023, while the U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were trading 27 cents, or 0.4% higher, at $72.04.

On Friday, oil prices stabilised after falling 3% the previous day as more shipping firms prepared to transit the Red Sea route. Major firms had stopped using Red Sea routes after Yemen’s Houthi militant group began targeting vessels.

Still, both benchmarks are on track to close at the lowest year-end levels since 2020, when the pandemic battered demand and sent prices nosediving.

Production cuts by the OPEC+ have proved insufficient to prop up prices, with the benchmarks declining nearly 20% from their highest level this year.

Oil’s weak year-end performance contrasts with global equities, which are on track to end 2023 higher.

The MSCI equity index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, is up about 20% from the beginning of the year, as investors ramp up bets on rapid-fire rate cuts from the U.S. Federal Reserve next year.

In the currency market, the dollar was rooted on the back foot and headed for a 2% decline this year after two years of strong gains.

The expected interest rate cuts, which could reduce consumer borrowing costs in major consuming regions, and a weaker dollar, which makes oil less expensive for foreign purchasers, could boost demand in 2024, industry officials say.

A Reuters survey of 30 economists and analysts forecasts Brent crude to average $84.43 a barrel in 2024, compared with an average of around $80 a barrel this year and the highs of over $100 in 2022 after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

 

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QatarEnergy to supply crude oil to Shell for five years in “first ever” contract agreement

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World Oil

(WO) – QatarEnergy has announced a five-year crude oil supply agreement with Shell International Eastern Trading Company, Singapore (Shell).

Source: World Oil

The agreement stipulates the supply of up to 18 MMbbl per annum of Qatar Land and Qatar Marine crude oils to Shell starting January 2024.

QatarEnergy and Shell have a long-standing strategic partnership through several shared investments in the energy industry in Qatar and globally, including QatarEnergy LNG projects, the Pearl GTL Plant, and several other joint investments.

His Excellency Mr. Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi, the Minister of State for Energy Affairs, the President and CEO of QatarEnergy, said, “We are delighted to sign our first ever five-year crude sales agreement. This agreement further strengthens QatarEnergy’s relationship with Shell, which is not only a reliable crude oil off-taker, but also a major customer and a strategic partner of QatarEnergy. We look forward to building on our historic relationship and hope we achieve greater success with Shell.”

 

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Reuters claims OPEC facing significant market share loss

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Oil Price

OPEC could potentially face further loss of market share in early 2024 following the recent departure of  Angola, weakening demand and rising output by non-OPEC producers, Reuters claims, based on its own calculations.

Source: Reuters

Reuters reports that OPEC’s production is set to slip below 27 million barrels per day (bpd) without Angola, good for less than 27% of the total global supply of 102 million bpd. The last time the cartel saw its market share fall to that level was at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic when global oil demand fell by nearly 20%.

Earlier in December, Angola officially announced its exit from OPEC over disagreements regarding its oil production quotas. Angola’s crude output clocked in at 1.15 million barrels per day in November, a sharp decline from 1.88 million barrels per day in 2017, one year after it joined OPEC thanks in large part to under-investments in its aging, deepwater oil fields.

OPEC has managed to maintain a market share in the 30-40% range, according to Reuters. However, record shale production by the United States has cut into that deeply. U.S. oil output hit an all-time high of 13.1 million barrels per day in the current year mainly due to efficiency and productivity gains by drillers in a bid to combat low oil prices.

Some analysts have forecast a slackening of U.S. oil output increase will slacken in the New Year, but many others view the estimates from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) as too conservative for 2024.

OPEC believes the market share loss might only be temporary. The group has predicted that the group’s global market share will come in at 40% in 2045 largely due to non-OPEC output declining from the early 2030s.

OPEC has forecast global oil demand will hit 116 million barrels a day (bpd) by 2045, 6 million bpd higher than expected in last year’s report, driven by growth demand by India, China, India, Africa and the Middle East.

India has been tipped to replace China as the main driver of global oil demand growth thanks mainly to a rapidly expanding population. Further, the country’s transition to renewable energy is expected to be much slower than China’s with the country recently backing coal-fired electricity generation.

 

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EU aspirant admits it could import more Russian gas

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Gazprom may once again become the only gas supplier to Moldova if the latter can secure a better price from the Russian energy giant than it can on supplies from the EU, Moldovan Energy Minister Victor Parlicov said on Friday in an interview with Publika TV.

The minister also said that the territory controlled by Chisinau switched to imports of gas from the EU in 2022, after Gazprom slashed supplies to the country by about 30%. Up to 5.7 million cubic meters per day are sent to the breakaway self-governing region of Transnistria.

The Russian company attributed the reduction to the refusal of Ukrainian state energy company Naftogaz to provide gas delivery services through the Sokhranovka entry point. 

“A pragmatic decision will be made: either we will buy gas from Gazprom, because it is at a very competitive price, or we will find a cheaper alternative,” Parlikov said, adding that the purchases could be resumed as soon as in May.

He added that the daily volumes of 5.7 million cubic meters will be enough for generating electric power on both the left and right banks of the Dniester River. Moldova still purchases electricity generated in a Transnistrian power plant using Gazprom’s gas.

The territory on the left bank of the Dniester, called Transnistria, proclaimed independence from Moldova in the early 1990s, shortly after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Around 1,100 Russian soldiers are stationed there as peacekeepers in order to monitor a 1992 ceasefire between Moldovan and local forces.

Moldova has been subject to a state of emergency that is renewed every 60 days since the launch of Russia’s military operation in Ukraine in February 2022. Since last December, Moldovagaz has been receiving the fuel from both the country’s state-run enterprise Energocom and Gazprom.

Earlier this year, Parlicov said that much of Moldova would no longer purchase Russian gas, adding that it had managed to procure gas from EU suppliers at a better price.

In December, Russian gas has been sold to Moldova for $831 per thousand cubic meter, Meanwhile, the same volume from the EU has cost the nation some $610.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

 

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Russia and Iran step up de-dollarization drive with pact to shun the greenback in bilateral trade, report says

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Russia and Iran have reportedly agreed to avoid the dollar in bilateral trade and use their own currencies instead.
The move is seen as part of the de-dollarization trend among nations to shift away from using the greenback in trade and investment.
Russia and Iran, both facing US economic sanctions, have been stepping up their cooperation.

Russia and Iran have entered into an agreement to avoid using the dollar in bilateral trade, relying instead on their own currencies, a new report says.

The central bank governors of the two nations sealed the pact at a recent meeting, Iran’s state media reported.

Russian and Iranian banks and companies can now use non-SWIFT messaging platforms and bilateral brokerage links to facilitate transactions in the ruble and rial.

Both Russia and Iran have been working to shift away from the dollar, after the US leveraged the greenback’s global dominance to slap economic sanctions on the two countries in recent years.

The move is also part of a wider drive among nations to reduce their reliance on the dollar in international payments and investments.

Countries from China to Brazil have been pushing to increase the global usage of their own currencies, while the BRICS group of nations has been weighing the possibility of a shared tender. More countries have joined the trend this year — Indonesia recently set up a task force to widen the use of its currency, the rupiah.

Russia and Iran, both facing US economic sanctions, have been steeping up economic cooperation.

Earlier this week, the Eurasian Economic Union — made up of Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan — signed a new trade deal with Iran, Reuters reported.

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