1/10 A quick journey through energy markets in 2020 via my articles for the FT this year. TLDR: 2020 is just the trailer for the full feature film that will play out over the next decade (@BNPPAM_COM, @CarbonBubble, @CarbonPulse).
2/10 First, and key to everything else, is this fundamental insight: renewable energy i(wind and solar) is intrinsically deflationary, while fossil fuels are intrinsically inflationary. I set out the logic of this argument in this FT piece of 16 December: ft.com/content/f2a27d…
3/10 Second, this has huge implications for the distribution of value across the global energy system — it means that as renewables take an ever greater share of global output over time so fossil fuels will also be subject to deflation (otherwise they won't be competitive).
4/10 In turn, this means that the lowest-cost OPEC producers will increasingly have an incentive to maximise their output as markets start to price in peak-oil demand. In this regard, the oil-price war of March/April this year is very instructive ...
5/10 ... as I argued in this FT piece on 16 March using Saudi Arabia as the best example. The point is, as renewables get cheaper the incentives for low-cost oil producers will change and long-term fixed-volume supply contracts will make more sense: ft.com/content/8c1758…
6/10 Third, the deflationary nature of renewables and hence declining cost of climate-change mitigation will accelerate global action on climate change, thus strengthening the narrative of imminent peak-oil demand, as I argued in this FT piece of 17 April: ft.com/content/bea183…
7/10 Fourth, as renewable energy costs continue to fall over the next decade, green hydrogen could be competitive with grey hydrogen in the EU by 2030 at a carbon price of €90/tonne (or €50/t in today's money), as explained in this FT piece of 2 October: ft.com/content/ecdeab…
8/10 Interestingly, and as I explained in this FT article of 1 July, the EU carbon market seemed already to have figured out earlier this year that prices will need to go much higher: over time ft.com/content/7bb3bd…
9/10 It should come as no surprise, then, that 2020 is ending with record-high carbon prices — yesterday the front-year EUA contract hit a new all-time high of €33.5/t (albeit it still well below the €50/t that is needed to put the EU onto a net-zero trajectory).
10/10 In short, the deflationary nature of renewable energy (wind and solar) is the key to understanding both the dramatic disruption in energy markets already seen in 2020, and, more importantly, the shape of things to come. Get ready for much deeper disruption./ Ends.

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More from @MCL1965

26 Apr
1/11: Yet another new all-time high in EUAs this morning (€47.73/t) so seems like a good moment to offer a reminder on the new pricing paradigm we have entered and how underlying fundamentals justify the market's bullishness (@CarbonBubble, @CarbonPulse, @RedshawAdvisors).
2/11: The EU will very soon have a legally binding target for net zero by 2050, and the EU-ETS is the principal policy tool for delivering this public-policy objective. Meanwhile, the introduction of the MSR in 2019 has made the market much more confident the EU-ETS can deliver.
3/11: The European Commission states that we cannot get to net zero by 2050 without green hydrogen playing a significant role in the final energy mix. I wrote an article for the FT on the implications of this for EUA prices back in October: ft.com/content/ecdeab…
Read 12 tweets
31 Dec 20
1/9 What if some of Shakespeare's most famous works were prescient parables about climate change? A look at 'Hamlet', 'Macbeth", 'A Midsummer Night's Dream', and 'King Henry IV, Part 2' through the lens of anthropogenic global warming. First thread of four, this one on 'Hamlet'.
2/9 Hamlet is the heir to the Danish throne whose father, the King, has been murdered by Hamlet's uncle (the King's brother). Not content with fratricide, the uncle then marries the King's widow (Hamlet's mother) and usurps the throne.
3/9 The dramatic tension in 'Hamlet' stems from the hero's attempt to resolve this horrifying and unnatural situation, and the tragedy stems from Hamlet's fatal character flaw – he is a chronic ditherer, and delays taking action time and again until it is too late.
Read 51 tweets

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