Energy Security and Geopolitics Conference | PM Session

    this is the second panel of the day um
    this is European energy security new
    tools and policies so obviously we’ve
    talked about energy security at a very
    high level today we’ve talked about it
    globally we’ve talked about the
    transatlantic relationship
    um with with our panelists uh we’re
    going to sort of dive into the European
    energy security landscape with a bit
    more detail and look at some of the
    interacting energy markets and some of
    the changes going on there um I’ve got
    excellent panel uh so to start off to my
    left I’ve got Ben McWilliams a fellow at
    bugal uh brussels-based think tank that
    is doing I think a lot of the best work
    on sort of the energy security crisis
    that happened over the last few years
    the economic ramifications and now
    moving out of that looking ahead to the
    long-term sort of picture for European
    energy which I think is crucial uh
    crucial work um next I have I have Emily
    Holland who’s assistant professor at the
    naval work work Naval War College who’s
    done a lot of fantastic work on the
    intersection of natural
    gas uh policymaking in Europe and Russia
    and now is the Deputy political adviser
    for critical infrastructure at NATO and
    so she’s going to have a lot of
    interesting things to say about some of
    the infrastructure challenges here and
    then joining remotely from across the
    pond we have Andre katru who is the
    climate policy adviser to the chairman
    and CEO at PPC from who we heard from
    earlier today um and so once again this
    is going to have a lot of insight into
    some of the commercial and Dynamics in
    the European electricity sector uh so
    thank you all for joining um really
    looking forward to this a few opening
    notes I think um we think about energy
    Security in Europe we think about Russia
    uh I think you know we could probably
    safely say that Visa V Russia European
    energy security has improved in the
    sense that the the gas weapon has been
    used it can’t be used again really uh so
    we might think that European energy
    Security structurally in a better place
    um perhaps that’s true in some
    Dimensions uh on the flip side of course
    the response to that has been new
    infrastructure new
    suppliers um new technologies new
    commercial Dynamics and so I would just
    introduce the idea that rather than uh
    structurally improved energy security we
    are now moving to just a different
    energy security landscape that’s going
    to require making sure we you know are
    vent about what where and what those
    risks are um
    and then I think in particular we want
    to think about the intersection of
    different fuels and different energy
    sources and so uh once again natural gas
    is on is on everyone’s mind but uh the
    the crisis of the last several years
    showed in particular the relationship
    between natural gas and electricity you
    can’t think of those two things uh
    independently they are one and the same
    in in in some really deep sense uh those
    two markets are linked the Technologies
    are linked the policy decisions are
    linked uh commercial and geopolitical
    relationships are linked uh if you think
    think about coal you want to think about
    LG you want to think about nuclear any
    of these fuels any of these or or you
    want to think about Technologies EVS
    solar panels all of this works within
    one combined energy ecosystem and uh
    policy decisions in one one sub sector
    impact the the the demands on the other
    so we just have to keep in mind sort of
    that synthesis perspective
    um I’m going to start uh just by opening
    it up here uh to to Ben um as you look
    at your I you know my opening theme
    which is the shifting risk uh where for
    you is is the new risk where where where
    for you is the structural sort of
    concern as you look at Europe as a whole
    thanks s thanks to the csis for the
    invitation it’s very nice to be
    here for Europe’s energy risk um I think
    coming out of the the gas crisis the
    situation there is is is much calmer
    than it has been in the past as people
    have discussed this morning I think one
    key risk and hangover from that is the
    impact on Industrial outputs in Europe
    which is is very depressed and even as
    prices have come down in the last six
    months industrial output in Europe
    hasn’t hasn’t resumed uh it stayed where
    it used to be which I mean I’m an
    economist and and you know lots of these
    energy intensive Industries I questioned
    the relative merits of them being in
    certain places in Europe and it probably
    makes sense this is a a structural
    adjustment on the other hand that’s hard
    um societally and politically we have
    European elections coming up in in just
    a couple of months we have national
    elections all around Europe and this
    kind of hangover and hits on Industrial
    activity I think is is a serious concern
    something to think more about and moving
    forwards and thinking about Europe’s
    energy security risks at least me
    personally that’s the way I kind of
    think of these Future Energy security
    risks is is through products through
    manufactured products where in in Europe
    it’s it’s not clear what share of future
    manufactured products we will have both
    energy intensive things like aluminium
    steel fertilizers but also which are
    also energy intensive solar panels and
    electric vehicles uh which are critical
    for enabling the transition uh and there
    Europe is stuck in this in this Middle
    Ground um between both China and the US
    where where like the us we feel the
    threats of China and the fact that China
    dominates so many of these value chains
    but also there’s a perception in Europe
    of of a slight threat from the the
    inflation reduction act that’s not um a
    mystery or a secret from people here and
    and you know trying to Define this
    industrial strategy in in Europe of what
    we want to produce and how we want to
    produce it in This Global competition
    between America and China where we have
    a European Union of 27 member states
    trying to think of an industrial
    strategy is is a really hard thing to do
    to get kind of unanimous agreement among
    these 27 countries and in my mind that’s
    the kind of shaping energy and climate
    question of the day uh we have in Europe
    we’ve asked two former Italian Prime
    Ministers to write reports on this one
    of them in Rico has published it Mario
    dragy will publish soon um after the new
    Parliament commission takes office there
    will be an industrial strategy document
    published and for me that’s the question
    thinking through balancing the fact that
    Europe is energy poor in both gas and
    oil and will likely still be energy poor
    in a world of
    Renewables um balancing that and the
    kind of the economic efficiencies that
    we would get from you know from greater
    trade of these Goods with the security
    of Supply risk
    on those products is the challenge
    finding that balance and not
    overthinking it someone on the panel uh
    this morning mentioned I mean the import
    of solar panels or electric vehicles is
    is not at all comparable to the import
    of of gas or oil if if one’s interrupted
    it doesn’t have the same impact but you
    know having lived through the crisis in
    Europe people think in those terms uh
    sometimes that when they have
    discussions they’re still having this
    fresh in the mind the interruption of
    Russian gas so so balancing out this
    security of Supply on manufactured
    products that are typically energy
    intensive for me I think is the in my
    mind one of or if not the defining
    question for Europe’s energy policy
    moving moving forward yeah so the the
    the Arc of um The Arc of demand and the
    composition of demand and the geographic
    distribution of demand within Europe is
    obviously determines the supply
    requirements it determines the
    infrastructure requirements um but it’s
    politically a comp it’s not an economic
    question per se it is fundamentally a
    political one um and and the those
    political sort of Dynamics I think are
    going to be
    consistently challenging uh Emily
    um talking about political Dynam
    Dynamics I’m thinking about
    infrastructure um obviously getting
    infrastructure built it’s a politically
    challenge challenging issue but uh I
    think I’m I’m just curious you know
    infrastructure unlike unlike fuel uh it
    sits for a long time once you build it
    it’s there for 30 30 40 50 years a
    transmission line can last for 50 plus
    years 60 70 years um gas pipelines
    decades so uh you know as Europe sort of
    invests in new classes of infrastructure
    how should it think about the the okay
    we’re shifting away from fuel exposure
    but we are creating new security risks
    and and how are how are you and I guess
    how is NATO thinking about that well I
    think one of the major impacts of course
    from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was a
    complete transformation in the way
    Europe is getting its fuel right so we
    have drastically reduced Russian
    Pipeline gas so that means an increase
    in LNG well LNG comes from a completely
    different way it’s not piped over large
    swats of land it comes via boat it has
    to go to R gasification terminals it’s a
    whole new set of infrastructure not only
    that but then you have increased
    Maritime presence you have more
    important and much more um frequent
    shipments of LG coming through um now
    quite contested Waters um in the North
    Sea um through the Baltic Sea so there’s
    a whole host of challenges with just the
    shift of how Europe is getting its fuel
    on the NATO side it’s very challenging
    because much of this infrastructure is
    not owned by the EU or NATO or even the
    states themselves they’re owned by
    private companies and consortiums so
    dealing with how to protect something
    that not even a state owns but a variety
    of different companies that are based in
    different states is a huge challenge how
    do we police that how do we investigate
    incidents how do we um convince insurers
    and private sector actors that we can
    police and protect these things is a
    huge challenge because there are so many
    different actors involved so I think
    what NATO is looking at right now is
    trying to figure out how best can we
    respond what is the best way to organize
    ourselves to respond and protect um to
    attacks which we’ve seen are very
    difficult to attribute and the problem
    with much of this infrastructure is that
    it is very vulnerable we obviously saw
    this with Russia or with the um
    explosion of nordstream but we see it
    all the time with smaller cabl smaller
    pipelines something as um as simple as
    an anchor drag can completely disrupt
    very serious and important critical
    infrastructure that’s hard to police we
    don’t have enough physical assets to be
    patrolling all of these things at once
    um what we have often viewed now is we
    can see like Russian Navy vessels
    patrolling their own infrastructure so
    we see boats sort of going along
    different undersea pipelines and cables
    and you don’t want to engage we’re not
    at war with Russia NATO is not at war
    with Russia so these are really tricky
    challenges and I think one of the
    biggest challenges that we see is how do
    we integrate the private sector and and
    that to me has been NATO’s biggest
    challenge right now how do we integrate
    the private sector how do we convince
    them to keep investing to keep building
    resilience because one of the big
    lessons that came out of the energy
    crisis and that still is coming is that
    that we did not have enough resilience
    in terms of our energy infrastructure in
    terms of our grids things could very
    easily come down and that’s not energy
    security right not having any resilience
    is not energy security so we need to
    build over capacity and to do that we
    need to convince the private sector and
    insures to keep building these
    assets yeah and that that um sounds
    vaguely expensive uh so which I think
    we’ll probably we’ll probably come to um
    Andre uh I guess same question to you
    but you know obviously at you’re at PPC
    you’re inside the electric electric
    sector you’re thinking about the
    relationship between your customer base
    your your national government and then
    of course you’ve got you know you’re
    thinking about the European perspective
    you’re thinking about uh the sort of
    common European objectives as it relates
    to energy security but you have to deal
    with the the folks that you have
    responsibility to responsibilities to so
    I guess to you you know H where is where
    is the energy security risk going and
    and what is what is the role of PPC in
    in that sort of
    conversation thank you very much I hope
    you can hear me well from from Brussels
    so before going specifically into into
    your question which I think is critical
    and important let me zoom out just a bit
    because I think it’s important to maybe
    connect a bit with uh the topic of our
    panel right so it’s tools and policies
    for investing energy security and I
    think to proper identify what are the
    right tools and and measures and
    policies to do that we I think in my
    view we need to respond to two critical
    uh questions in the moment the first one
    is what is energy Security today and how
    we are defining it uh and I know you
    have a dedicated panel on that coming up
    next so I don’t want to spoil the fun
    but I think it’s important to yeah no I
    I won’t but it’s important to remember
    what we ought to consider as affecting
    or improving energy security right so as
    as the chairman was mentioning at the
    beginning of the event we are talking
    about layers of energy security nowadays
    so for centuries we had domestic
    resources that were meeting uh domestic
    demand then in the second part of the
    20th century we have more physical and
    Commercial ties with countries that have
    an abundance of that and I think we can
    all agree that this is the moment when
    geopolitics of energy kind of started
    and we’ve seen the limits of that uh
    over the past few years with uh Russian
    uh gas imported in Europe but we’ve also
    seen in this layer a solution uh with
    uslg supporting the security of Supply
    in Europe and now we have another layer
    a third layer if you want of clean
    Technologies both on the supply and the
    demand side which is highly obviously
    dependent on critical raw materials and
    uh clean manufacturing we know that but
    I think the combination of these layers
    uh is actually generating uh different
    energy security definitions for each
    geography because we are having very
    different uh starting points but
    geopolitics of tomorrow with this
    Renewables picking up will uh arguably
    be less tense because we will have more
    local production so the destination when
    we will have a peak of this uh uh
    generation local generation will be less
    geopolitically tense but the journey
    towards that will be very complicated
    which actually leads me to my second
    critical question and Ben was uh very
    rightly so uh referring to that in his
    in his part who are we partner of
    partnering up with so as you know John
    herdz defined in 1950 the security
    dilemma right so when one state
    increases its security the other that
    leads to the other the other states to
    see that and to fear that and to
    increase their own security capacity so
    in that sense I think we are now uh
    living a moment in which uh we can
    Define what is happening as a energy
    security dilemma with countries
    investing in their energy security uh
    systems and Frameworks and to this end I
    think we would need to understand who
    are our trusted and like-minded partners
    because a a a too fragmented uh let’s
    say way of rebuilding our energy
    Security will not give us the full
    benefits of uh uh of the energy
    transition of economies of scale of
    lower energy bills and it will also not
    solve the the climate change and for
    that reason I think the US and EU
    partnership is is probably more
    important than uh than ever which
    basically leads me to your question uh
    so I think it’s it’s it’s important to
    understand that what happened over the
    past few years in Europe of course
    started from the uh gas uh prices
    picking up from the uh Russian gas
    prices that were increasing and uh that
    also took advantage uh like Emily
    mentioned of the low resilience that the
    Energy System had and probably not a
    very well functioning energy Market
    design and we’ve seen some coordinated
    efforts over the past few years on on on
    that but I think the the the the
    solution what actually solved quote
    unquote the electricity prices crises
    was not necessarily the um innov um
    Innovative policies that we put in place
    because they are not necessarily new and
    they are not silver bullets but it’s
    actually uh what has been mentioned also
    in the previous pal uh panel so USL gas
    being uh imported in Europe new uh
    suppliers for gas Solutions
    infrastructure that you mentioned but
    also on the other side Ben is
    highlighting also some significant
    demand reduction or even destruction at
    some point so as you mentioned um
    infrastructure and um uh security of
    Supply go hand in hand but we need to
    understand and to respond to these two
    critical questions in my view in order
    to find the right policies and tools to
    uh to address
    that so you know you you’ve mentioned
    you know commercial commercial Partners
    finding commercial partners and then
    and then also but they have to be
    trusted and because these are going to
    be the bedrocks of our energy security
    it’s not going to be a fragmented
    equilibrium is like sort of a suboptimal
    equilibrium um that’s probably true you
    know globally but certainly within
    Europe as as well and um the energy
    security dilemma is really interesting
    as it relates to let’s say the
    electricity sector where um you know
    it’s still National each each country
    has its own sort of priorities Within it
    within its borders about how much how
    it’s going to produce its electricity
    but of course it’s far more optimal to
    to integrate to to share resources to
    move power across the continent um so
    you know i’ I’d love to just sort of
    maybe explore this this this challenge
    in particular this this integration
    challenge um uh for Europe in particular
    because it’s it seems to be a key pillar
    of of a secure Energy Future and yet
    presumably um I’m challenging you know
    uh first me I’ll throw it right back to
    you
    Andre can you just talk a little bit
    about about transmission you know I you
    know I know uh Greece has plans to
    integrate with its neighbors um is it
    you know how much transmission is needed
    what is the risk of sort of
    underbuilding transmission and what are
    the what are the blocks
    there so I think grids in general both
    distribution and transmission are a
    common problem across geography so I
    think in the US we have more or less the
    same issue we have that in Europe as
    well
    and and before addressing what I see as
    being the barriers um Let me let me tell
    you that I think on the transmission at
    least on the transmission side I think
    uh we are talking about a Hidden Gem
    here because if we were to actually ramp
    up uh investments in the transmission we
    would basically convert this
    intermittence that we have from
    renewable generation in some places more
    to a base load like uh energy because we
    will be able to uh uh to transport it in
    some other region that have a deficit
    and and and vice versa right so when it
    comes to uh the the barriers to to
    ramping up that I think cost is
    obviously something that comes uh uh
    comes into play quite uh easily and um
    that’s the reason why we are not seeing
    so immediate let’s say action in that
    sense um everything has been passed to
    the uh transmission and distribution
    tariffs in the past because they are man
    natural monopolies operators but
    obviously there are limits to how much
    politically this can be uh uh converted
    into tariffs so I think we need to look
    into other Solutions and other policies
    to to address that but that would be the
    first time we will we will be doing that
    in Europe and and also uh in the US as
    well because adding some additional
    funds to the uh uh distribution and
    transmission tariffs is something that
    hasn’t been done before so it’s not that
    easy even if we were to identify uh the
    the money to do that and then I think
    the deployment time is also an issue uh
    permitting U both in the US and the EU
    are is is quite an a significant let’s
    say barrier and um in order to meet 2030
    2040 demand and and targets I think uh
    transmission needs to um investment in
    transmission and distribution would need
    to speed up in order to um to actually
    have or to keep let’s say these targets
    U uh in sight
    uh Ben um you know Andre mentions cost I
    think cost is you know in the US cost
    alloc we call it cost allocation it’s
    the it’s the chief barrier to expand
    expanding transmission um in my opinion
    that is uh in Europe you know cost
    allocation Comes The Challenge around
    this comes from different states having
    different Visions for their own Energy
    Futures um and that those different
    Energy Futures include sort of Visions
    for their industrial bases and and
    policy can you can you just talk about
    some of the I guess I would say
    intra-european um tensions at play that
    that make this challenging you know
    across the various divides and member
    states because I think it’s sort of easy
    to think well we have European unity in
    the face of you know Russian aggression
    as it relates to some of the the
    response over the last several decad
    last several years you know where does
    that what does that run up into when it
    comes to something like uh a large scale
    transmission build out sure thanks um
    indeed I think for me that’s perhaps the
    main challenge with the with
    transmission buildout is it’s very clear
    that building up transmission is a win
    for Europe you know to net positive you
    you need less capacity Less storage
    lower deployment of Renewables but you
    create winners and losers um and that’s
    the challenge how how do you balance off
    these tradeoffs a very concrete one is
    is France um in the connection between
    the Iberian Peninsula Spain Portugal
    through through France into Germany gas
    and electricity um and Spain is they
    have the the biggest LG capacity in in
    Europe and it was sitting there unused
    for the whole of the crisis and no
    progress was made um on the gas pipeline
    from Spain through France to Germany I
    think in the coming years the the
    priority now is electricity not not not
    so much the gas pipelines but again the
    the connection from the Iberian
    Peninsula into kind of the heart of
    European Manufacturing in Germany
    is is is Tiny and that’s I mean the
    concern they’re going to deploy a lot of
    solar a lot of wind in Spain there’s a
    lot of abundant land resources and and
    that’s going ahead and and there’s no
    there’s no compromise being found here
    on building out pipel which is a problem
    and it will fragment Europe it will mean
    that your industrial facilities you
    should go to Spain if if if you’re an
    energy intensive producer right now I
    would be looking at Spain and trying to
    make an agreement how I can get in there
    very soon they’re going to have in many
    hours of the year um abundant capacity
    they’re going to have more soul and wind
    than their demand is um so I think
    that’s a big a big challenge um and and
    in for France with the nuclear I mean
    that’s that’s a big question for them
    right I mean they sit in the middle and
    if they kind of allow unfettered access
    to their Market of renewable spiking and
    going down every few hours what does
    that mean for this plan of building out
    another 20 gaw or so of nuclear that you
    want to just be running constantly on on
    Bas load um so there there’s a huge
    problem there and it’s it’s at the top
    of the political agenda in Europe I
    think enri letter in his report and
    Mario dragy again will emphasize it and
    they’ll put it on the table of policy
    makers um so Europe’s aware of it and
    wants to do better but at the moment um
    yeah we haven’t really got the solutions
    um and just one more point to to throw
    out which came from listening to Andre
    is on um on the nature of electricity
    tariffs and the fact that at the moment
    we recoup costs for transmission but
    also for things like contracts for
    difference for building out Sol and wind
    we recouped them onc bills and we
    recruit them largely from households uh
    so we exempt typically energy intensive
    and companies from this this recruitment
    of payments which made sense for many
    years but now going forward we’re about
    to put a carbon tax on households in
    Europe um and we’re asking them to
    switch to heat pumps to to to deploy
    heat pumps and consume more and more
    electricity yet at the same time as we
    build out more transmission and more
    Renewables we lump the the costs of
    electricity on them which is a little
    bit irrational and I mean one argument
    we’re pushing is Shifting away uh from
    electricity tariffs towards National
    budgets and just general taxation to to
    fund these kind of things um to remove
    this this strange incentive
    Behavior yeah that’s um deeply
    challenging the the the sort of the the
    the pile up of costs from what you know
    at first glance might appear to be
    different different projects different
    priorities and they all the money
    filters down somewhere and piles up on
    cost Emily can you just sort of talk
    about how you think you know National
    policy makers sort of are responding to
    that what are the what are what are they
    facing and again how does that shape the
    sort of the the the energy Union
    possibilities yeah so there’s there’s
    two sort of related challenges that
    relate to financing that I think are are
    quite concerning so the first is that as
    you know as Europe is moving towards
    clean energy technology it’s still a
    reality that uh fossil fuels and
    particularly liquidi natural gas are
    going to remain the pillar of the
    European Energy Mix for quite some time
    so challenge there is when you are
    saying to your investors we are going to
    phase out natural gas by I think the I
    think repower EU has some magic thinking
    like 2030 not going to happen but saying
    that’s going to happen how do you
    convince investors to lay out large
    Capital expenditures on infrastructure
    for a fuel that you say we’re no longer
    going to use or they’re going to be
    banned right so that’s that’s a kind of
    structural challenge that we haven’t
    really figured out how to manage yet um
    you know states are signing 15E long
    deals for LG I think Germany just signed
    one with the UAE the other day for
    another 15 year long deal so these are
    you know not short periods of time but
    if you look at it in terms of energy
    infrastructure that’s actually a pretty
    short time Horizon I mean when companies
    are building gas pipelines they’re
    looking 30 40 50 60 years right to
    recoup these sort of long-term
    Investments and that’s why the European
    system natural gas system of long-term
    contracts sort of came into being was to
    support the the structure of C Capital
    expenditures on infrastructure so now
    we’re looking at much shorter timelines
    and industry has to figure out how do we
    invest in these sorts of things knowing
    that we have a much shorter time Horizon
    now relatedly to that is that’s on the
    that’s on the hydrocarbon side on the
    other side we know that the EU needs to
    incentivize clean energy technology well
    that’s great how will it pay for the
    Accelerated Green energy transition
    there are many different projects um uh
    there’s you know the eu’s Next
    Generation EU which is this financing um
    project which came out in 2021 it’s due
    to expire in 2026 and that was basically
    um a mix of Grants and Loans um for each
    member state with the money raised
    through joint EU debt um speaking to
    what what um Ben was saying there’s some
    disagreements among the states about if
    they’d like to continue this right some
    EU states don’t believe in public joint
    financing and debt uh Germany for one
    there are concerns by smaller states
    that
    this will mean that the bigger States
    like France and Germany will have an
    outsized voice if they are doing most of
    the the fundraising but the challenge is
    how is it going to pay for these things
    there’s a lot of programs there’s a lot
    of challenges but there’s not a lot of
    money and particularly right now the
    biggest challenge is that all of this
    money that we want to earmark for the
    clean energy transition is actually also
    in demand for defense spending and in
    this current atmosphere most of the
    money is going to be allocated towards
    defense in and so what happens to those
    very lofty goals in terms of bringing
    clean energy um technology production
    and transmission to the continent so far
    there’s not really a consensus on how uh
    that’s going how that’s going to be paid
    for Andre you you brought up this this
    cost point I’m curious curious what you
    think about sort of the some of the I
    guess you talked about sort of
    innovation in terms of how to how to
    fund projects and I’m
    curious uh from the in the utility space
    how how what is the best sort of
    solutions set to sort of figure out ways
    to what solve what is essentially a
    missing money problem you know I guess
    that assumes probably that means in
    attracting private private dollars into
    the ecosystem so curious from the
    utility perspective what that looks like
    I’d love to give you one specific answer
    but there’s no Silver Bullet I guess and
    uh my fellow panelist I think they agree
    with me there’s no Silver Bullet and we
    have very different starting points when
    come to member states and there’s also
    not a secret Source if you want to keep
    the analogy so uh there are very
    different tools that we could use and we
    should use but we need to look also and
    and I think uh Ben was mentioning that
    at the beginning at the political let’s
    say context so over the past two years
    Europe had quite a limited I would say
    time to um put forward some adaptation
    measures uh to deal with the crisis uh
    what is next after this year after the
    elections both in the EU and the us that
    are important for the European Union uh
    will basically put a framework uh
    forward for what is coming in the next
    few years and the next this next
    commission will end its mandate uh just
    a few months from the 2030 targets which
    are some of them are quite ambitious and
    I think that is the this is the moment
    when we need to find the right uh
    elements and the right tools to actually
    Implement some of this uh uh policies
    and this uh files that we put uh forward
    now coming back to that um of course we
    need to look into how to speed up
    renewable generation while ensuring
    reliability of Supply that is critical
    and that is the conundrum that we need
    to to look at but at the same time I
    think it’s critical coming back to your
    initial point it’s critical to look at
    infrastructure whether or not
    infrastructure is ready today to
    accommodate for this transition whether
    or not we will have a very fastpaced
    transition towards renewable or not so
    fast but still a transition towards
    renewable that is important but I think
    we need to have the backbone first and
    that is where I think we are lacking or
    lagging behind if you want uh in terms
    of Investments and in terms of needs to
    accommodate for this new let’s say
    energy ecosystem that would include both
    the uh uh intermittent generation as
    well as a more flexible and more adapted
    demand as well as some uh digital tools
    and digital platforms that would somehow
    unlock system efficiency so I still
    think that grids is probably the number
    one uh topic that we need to look at
    both in terms of financing and in terms
    of deployment let’s not forget uh we we
    are not performing very well when it
    comes to the lead time of deploying this
    infrastructure so that is probably the
    first the the the get-go let’s say
    element that we need to take care of and
    then look at the all the others that are
    equally urgent of
    course
    um we’re we’re sort of we’re sort of
    circling you know sort intra intra euu
    intra-european challenges
    um I I want to which I think is sort of
    perhaps underappreciated as like a
    source of geopolitical tensions um but
    of course the traditional sort of
    perspective is thinking Europe exposure
    internationally and so I I want to just
    shift that way you know we’ve talked
    about the euus relationship Andre has
    sort of really clearly mentioned the
    importance of us LNG um I curious you
    know first on maybe perhaps natural gas
    but also electricity some of the the the
    new corridors being opened up from
    Europe I’m thinking in
    particular uh to the south to North
    North Africa to the Middle East to the
    caucuses um you know what what should we
    expect from those relationships uh Emily
    I guess I throw this throw this to you
    and and what are the the sort of the new
    sources of risk that that invites uh and
    that European policy makers need to
    consider so I think the biggest
    difference if we’re going to compare the
    risk that Europe is is is sustaining now
    in terms of dependency with these new
    relationships as opposed to comparing it
    to um it its relationship with Russia is
    that um LG trade creates a very
    different scent of different set of
    factors in terms of dependence right so
    one of the reasons why dependence was so
    serious on Russia was because of these
    long-term contracts and because it was
    fixed pipeline infrastructure via land
    that there wasn’t a lot of alternatives
    for right like but we know now l& is
    much more flexible right you have
    infrastructure that can accommodate LG
    from multiple different sources right so
    the dependency on any one source now is
    just not as great in terms of just the
    just the number of suppliers or a lot
    more but also just the physical
    properties of of lmg is is totally
    different so so the risk is a lot less
    and we can’t look at it in terms of the
    same sort of like traditional energy
    security dependence that we thought
    about with Russia in terms of natural
    gas however that doesn’t mean that there
    aren’t risks right so opening up to
    increased Supply from let’s let’s just
    take North Africa as an example well
    North Africa as a source of of energy
    has been problematic for a number of of
    years because of the political the
    serious political instability um uh that
    that comes in some of these states I
    mean we had you know some North African
    States actually to stop exporting all
    together because of political RIS and
    that has not changed at all like that
    has not been ameliorated in any any
    meaningful sense then of course you have
    um increased uh natural gas deals with
    Middle Eastern suppliers there the
    political risk is not as is inherent as
    it in North Africa but there is
    competition right so it’s one of the the
    the things about the Russian natural gas
    trade was yes there was a lot of
    dependence but there also wasn’t
    competition because Russia was taking
    gas out of the ground and Russia put it
    in a pipeline and sending it to Europe
    now lmg can be traded all over the world
    and so there is just a lot more there’s
    a lot more buyers there’s a lot of
    people wanting LG can go all around the
    world and Europe will pay more for it
    but it doesn’t mean that other people
    don’t need it as much so it creates
    other sort of negative externality one
    of the kind of consequences of the
    energy crisis was that Russia sorry that
    Europe was paying so much more for
    liquefied natural gas and that was
    driving up prices so that non- premium
    Asian markets could no longer afford to
    pay for that and that has caused serious
    energy crisises and say Pakistan which
    still has rolling blackouts I think for
    eight hours a day um Sri Lanka and
    Bangladesh so there’s sort of
    externalities that have changed the
    dependencies have changed but there’s
    still a lot of risk and problems
    inherent with new
    suppliers yeah you we should we should
    sort of
    uh keep in mind the way sort of
    geopolitical considerations Cascade and
    show up into in cious way sort of like
    so like that has shifted the
    relationship with Europe’s relationship
    with the global South let’s say was like
    sort of I think in many ways that those
    exact sort of um examples have sort of
    perhaps entered into the climate
    conversation okay so now you want to get
    together a cop and you want to talk
    about climate well what you these
    decisions on the energy side in an
    energy crisis Cascade through and show
    up into ways that are sort of like may
    you wouldn’t expect and so important to
    keep that in mind
    um then uh there’s there’s another fuel
    that we’re sort of I think Europe talks
    a lot about I don’t know much about I’m
    sort of unsure of and that would be
    hydrogen it seems to be a new tool it’s
    been characterized as a Swiss army knife
    um what
    what is Europe thinking about hydrogen
    and I mean and and then it’s after that
    I think maybe we’ll talk about the way
    hydrogen interacts with natural gas but
    just just characterize where how why and
    how Europe’s thinking about
    hydrogen um for those who follow
    hydrogen I’m more in the kind of Michael
    LIC uh ladder hyrogen ladder world so
    that that frames my remarks um I mean so
    in 2020 Europe launched uh its hydrogen
    strategy and here hydrogen was really
    about integrating electricity market so
    balancing kind of the the two three
    weeks of the year uh in the winter when
    when you’ve got low renewable outputs
    and doing things around the edges so um
    helping to decarbonize the production of
    fertilizers where where you certainly
    need hydrogen potentially some transport
    applications but very Niche where
    potentially you know the size of battery
    wouldn’t be able to do it that that’s
    where we began in 2020 in
    2022 um all of a sudden with the the
    energy crisis in Russia’s Invasion the
    European commission was pushed to
    publish a document which Emily mentioned
    the repower EU strategy and there they
    were given the political mandate how can
    we have no Russian gas by
    2027 and they were given three weeks to
    kind of write this document up and it’s
    a team of like 10 people who we also
    spoke with at the time and yeah they
    were a bit
    stressed and and there all of a certain
    hydrogen took on a new role it wasn’t
    just about decarbonizing around the
    edges it was about molecule for molecule
    replacing natural gas which in my view
    is the wrong way to think about hydrogen
    uh but that’s a little bit The Narrative
    that developed and that’s I would say in
    in policy circles a narrative that was
    pushed on the ground in terms of actual
    Investments I don’t think it’s something
    reflected in reality I think hydrogen is
    still progressing quite slowly in Europe
    and we’re not really seeing a huge ramp
    up of the sector um but so that’s a bit
    where you the debate is stuck between
    these two these two um end points of
    replacing Russian natural gas or doing
    things around the edges um and I think I
    mean going back to the remarks I made at
    the beginning on on manufactured
    products for me with hydrogen that’s
    another really big question for Europe
    uh two of the the big thing it’s likely
    going to make a lot of sense to do with
    hydrogen is producing steel uh and
    producing
    fertilizers and I mean producing steel
    to take that as one example that’s the
    foundation of the European Union the
    coal and Steel Community that’s where we
    came from and do we want to try and
    produce all of this clean hydrogen
    recing in
    progress to then um make steel or do we
    accept that for example in in Australia
    uh where you can produce green hydrogen
    with lots of land very cheaply it’s
    quite hard to put that on a ship and
    send it to Europe as hydrogen it’s a lot
    easier to make steel rods put them on a
    ship and send them to Europe and
    economically that would make our
    decarbonization much easier uh but again
    Dani your steel is made in Australia and
    how do you feel about that in Europe so
    for me that’s again the the question of
    of hydrogen and just just to close and I
    mentioned at the the beginning of this
    ladder I mean there are those who think
    hydrogen can heat our homes and can
    drive our cars and I think increasingly
    the consensus is that this doesn’t make
    any sense and I’m quite firmly of the
    belief that electrification is is
    decarbonization in Europe and hydrogen
    will be kind of a niche complement to
    that so we can discuss you know energy
    security of it but I don’t think it will
    be at all comparable in relevance to to
    gas today
    well no I think it’s helpful and I think
    it’s important to keep in mind the
    context in which in which you know plans
    are produced and um sort of Visions are
    articulated and of course all
    Technologies sort of go through the
    cycle of sort of hype and then reality
    and then and then true progress and I
    think that’s probably what we’ll see in
    hydrogen as well um it makes me happy to
    hear that there are European experts uh
    who are thinking like this um uh so you
    know Europe’s future you’ve just you
    you’ve characterized Europe as energy
    poor um we’ve talked about the costs uh
    you know energy security seems to have
    improved through the through the
    function of diversity at bare minimum
    we’ve got increased diversity uh so
    that’s that’s valuable um the the
    long-term goal the long-term vision
    seems to be electricity electrification
    large scale electrification um and then
    figuring out a way to supply that
    electricity uh so I guess on on one side
    I’m curious in the US we have this huge
    conversation around electric demand
    growth um and look looks like Andre is
    back perfect timing Andre excellent work
    um uh we have a huge conversation around
    electric demand growth obviously Europe
    has spent two years shedding demand uh
    uh some of that might be sort of I guess
    you might characterize as good demand
    response uh you know effective P pricing
    signals uh introducing Market mechanisms
    by which consumers can sort of respond
    to prices we like that that’s a good
    demand response that creates a more
    efficient system um but of course as you
    mentioned there’s there’s been some bad
    demand response it might be better
    characterized as demand destruction long
    term however um I guess I’ll ask Andre
    this question you know what is how does
    Europe think about like the scale of
    demand growth that it electric demand
    growth in particular that it might uh
    that it might see over the the not next
    year or the year following but the five
    the 10 the 20e Strategic perspective on
    electric demand growth and I think we’ll
    all want to talk about okay how do we
    serve electricity CU that’s that seems
    to be the fundamental question um uh for
    for for Europe 20 years from now uh how
    do we how do we deliver this at volume
    so Andre just just to start at least is
    your thinking about electric demand
    growth the way the way we’re kind of
    worked up about this in the
    US thank you very much uh great to be
    back case in point infrastructure we
    need infrastructure you know
    communication energy we need it so um no
    I I agree and I think uh looking at all
    the scenarios that we are uh considering
    at the moment electrification um will
    grow and has to grow in order to uh stay
    within the limits of 1.5 uh uh clate
    targets for 2050 and we are seeing that
    of course we are seeing what Ben was
    mentioning some uh demand uh uh
    decreasing in in industrial uh sectors
    and that is not good obviously we are
    seeing some demand that just responded
    to to the price signal and invested in
    some capacity in in improving and making
    its demand more efficient more its
    consumption more efficient but I think
    looking forward we have no choice
    basically uh um but to follow and to
    focus on electricity when it comes to
    Mobility when it comes to heating when
    it comes to other U energy consumptions
    and I think electrification to to Ben
    point is actually one of the reasons why
    hydrogen may not be a solution to
    everything because Europe has I mean
    even with this demand uh uh decrease
    over the past few years Europe still has
    at least in some regions uh a
    electricity deficit we are trying to and
    we are pushing for electrification
    across our uh different let’s say uh
    demand um energy options and for these
    reasons probably hydrogen will not be a
    solution in in in that sense we are
    seeing that we are seeing demand in the
    pre in the coming years uh picking up uh
    I know in the US there’s a lot of demand
    um um increase explained by the fact
    that data centers are picking up once
    again I think we will see that and we
    continue to see that in Europe so we
    have all the vectors all the ingredients
    that will that indicate a an increas in
    electrification demand the question is
    how once again going back to my previous
    Point how to serve them uh you know
    through the current and existing
    infrastructure and what we put in place
    in order to um make up to offset the
    supply that we are trying to decarbonize
    in the next few
    years so Emily I’ll go to you now
    thinking about long-term strategic
    perspective um where is Europe going to
    get its electricity
    from I mean and now I’d ask the same
    question to Ben it Renewables seem to be
    the the path gas is going to serve as a
    balancing resource we’re going to need
    to build transmission um is is is that
    is that Division and therefore it’s it’s
    just fundamentally a question of
    deployment is that is the ability to
    finance and permit and solve the
    political battles associated with sort
    of that Vision the the fundamental
    energy security risk facing Europe yeah
    I mean I think it’s part of it I think
    we’ve talked about it earlier today is
    yes we are Renewables is the way forward
    in Europe I mean that’s already Europe
    is producing a lot more of its
    electricity via renewable energy and
    that’s going to be the path forward with
    obviously gas as a as a bridge fueld for
    quite some time I think the question
    remains how is Europe going to do that
    in a competitive way right is it going
    to be a leader in um producing the
    technology for clean energy is it going
    to remain competitive in doing that and
    so right now you know the question is
    how can we how can Europe compete Visa
    the US and the IRA and and China um and
    so I think that’s a challenge for
    industrial policy and you know that’s
    the that’s really sort of the question
    on everybody’s mind this day for Europe
    is Europe needs a serious industrial
    policy that’s going to have some major
    structural adjustments that I think are
    going to be quite painful in a lot of
    places we’re already sort of seeing
    those structural adjustments and Ben was
    mentioning earlier I mean there’s just a
    there’s a manufacturing problem problem
    in Europe and we were talking a little
    bit before this panel you know if you
    look at historically at when you start
    to lose competitiveness in manufacturing
    you lose jobs they go to places where
    it’s cheaper to manufacture those don’t
    come back those jobs they don’t return
    generally so it’s an it’s a kind of
    imperative right now to make the sort of
    adjustments to stop those jobs from
    leaving and to replace maybe some of the
    heavy industry that was powered by Cheap
    Russian gas for the last 40 50 years
    with now changing those jobs to clean
    energy Manu facturing but that’s a
    challenge because the IRA has some
    serious distortional effects uh the EU
    knew about this immediately but is is
    trying to sort of compete for this
    challenge now but then also China and
    then that gets you back to the circular
    logic of the question now are we are we
    sort of replacing this dependency now on
    China for critical mineral production
    and refining right and this is something
    that the EU and the US are working very
    hard at right now is trying to
    understand the actual National Security
    implications of dependency on on China
    and other places for critical minerals
    and this is not a question that’s
    actually been very
    well studied um I have manura Grant
    right now that I’m working on this very
    issue with and we’ve been we just ran
    the second of our series of events last
    week at UT Austin and we had a whole
    bunch of folks from DOD and doe and
    state and then private sector actors and
    there is still no consensus actually
    around what are the actual risks of
    critical mineral Supply chains we don’t
    know right we know the extent to which
    China has a proportion of the
    manufacturing of the production of the
    refining chain but what ises that
    actually mean in terms of our resilience
    and resistance if there was going to be
    for you know in in some sense a blockade
    how else can we Source these kind of
    places okay do we want to go to
    Indonesia well what do their their laws
    against export banss and their Chinese
    involvement mean there’s just so many
    layers of these questions we really
    haven’t figured it out yet so I think
    understanding actually what the
    implications of that risk are and then
    figuring out the extent to which we can
    or will cooperate with China um is is a
    huge question
    um this is going to be an unplanned
    question so I’m going to throw this to
    Andre or Ben um we haven’t talked about
    you know another tool in the toolkit
    which is
    nuclear um I think there’s always been
    sort of Divergent visions of nuclear in
    Europe I don’t think that’s going away
    anytime soon um but I mean I think
    there’s a lot of excitement about the
    opportunities associate with smrs you’re
    seeing certain countries let’s say
    Poland uh really pursue this
    aggressively France of course an
    incumbent and sort of a leader in this
    field um is is is nuclear a way out of
    this sort of uh tension um and you know
    what is the role of I guess I’d say sort
    of European policy in terms of
    facilitating this or is this going to be
    and remain sort of a national level
    issue I’ll thr this to you or Andre I’d
    love to get your thoughts on on on the
    Arc of nuclear in Europe maybe I go I’m
    a nuclear engineer first so I’ll pass
    this to to Ben maybe I’m a bit biased on
    that so I’ll pass this to Ben okay well
    no I want to hear your point but Ben
    please please go first and then we’ll
    we’ll hear from the engine I don’t plan
    to say anything on nuclear specific I
    leave that for for Andre I mean it it
    will remain a national policy issue it’s
    it’s not possible to get European
    unanimity on on nuclear and it’s kind of
    permissible environment but that’s
    something that’s that’s hard so I think
    this will remain a national issue where
    some countries will pursue this
    aggressively like France and others
    won’t um and and I mean
    it’s a slightly different but but my
    question in Europe at the moment is and
    I think it will come more with the
    election is this this growing sense of
    weird 8 n% of global emissions we’ve
    done a lot to decarbonize why should we
    keep doing it why should we introduce a
    carbon tax and one of the things I think
    is fascinating about Europe and Europe
    can kind of provide to the world is this
    laboratory of different decarbonization
    Pathways um where you will have France
    who will try and get a grid that’s 90%
    nuclear R where you will get Germany who
    will have no nuclear in the grid and
    they’ll try and do kind of hydrogen or
    natural gas CCS back up to Renewables
    where you’ll have the countries around
    the Alps who will have hydro storage
    backing this up and all this this kind
    of amalgamation of very different
    electricity mixes obviously with
    transmission capacity um but that’s one
    thing where I I think it’s quite
    exciting for Europe and whatever you
    think about nuclear I I think it’s quite
    exciting that at least a few countries
    in Europe pursue this pathway and we’re
    not we don’t only decarbonize in the
    solar wind battery but we have this this
    different thing which then provides to
    countries around the world who for
    whatever reason don’t deploy solo wind
    at the same level a second option of
    nuclear a third option of Hydra if they
    happen to have the resources available
    um and so for me that’s something
    exciting about about Europe and kind of
    a service Europe could do for the world
    in shuring these different electricity
    decarbonization Pathways yeah yeah uh
    sort of security in diversity once again
    shows up there uh yeah Andre please
    sorry I’m pointing
    but I don’t want to be a a story to but
    I agree with Ben basically uh we have
    very different starting points and I
    think the nuclear industry speaks
    volumes to how different member states
    are uh across the EU but I think what is
    different uh when it comes to the
    nuclear sector when it comes to nuclear
    generation what is very different is
    that um there’s a the prerequisite to
    deploy something is a sort of an
    experience in that field it’s not
    something that you can acquire just by
    buying it’s something that you need to
    basically Foster uh uh either domestic
    or with your partner so that translates
    into higher lead times I would say for
    those that haven’t started or that don’t
    have a a nuclear plan but I think uh
    Ben’s point is is is correct and it
    shows the diversity across the EU and it
    shows the challenges and it shows how
    Solutions coming from Brussels are not
    Universal are not silver bullets and can
    only uh provide some sort of benefits to
    some countries and no benefits to others
    so I think that’s you know the the
    diversity of that is is actually both a
    a pain point to some extent as well as a
    a an advantage that the member states uh
    have um okay so I’m going to open up the
    questions if people want to talk about
    electricity gas markets in Europe this
    is this is your chance
    uh I’ll start with sammer
    please oh
    Sam thank you great panel love the
    discussion
    um I am Ben I’m really curious bugal is
    like right in the mix you guys are there
    like in the weeds and you’re talking a
    lot of people and this is a question I
    was hoping nobody asked me but I’m going
    to ask you um Russian gas it’s there
    right and there’s a lot of Industry who
    are who are near it you know uh do you
    is there talk still amongst industry in
    the region about a scenario in which you
    turn the Taps back on I mean again the
    pipes are there right so I’m I’m curious
    what is the what is the energy what what
    are The Vibes what are The Vibes over
    there thanks thank you for the difficult
    question and we’ll we’ll make sure all
    the panelists can get in on this if they
    if they dare to I W for think thanks so
    the beauty is I I can I can say what I
    want and it doesn’t matter
    so no and I mean this morning the
    conversation was that there’s no going
    back
    um I don’t think Europe’s about to turn
    back and and this is isn’t based on
    conversations with the industry but my
    sense would be a little bit more
    pessimistic I guess is the right word
    that it might be possible um you know
    Europe hasn’t introduced any sanctions
    on natural gas uh which people forget
    and and policy makers they say we
    successfully transitioned away from
    Russian natural gas we haven’t yet still
    there and we didn’t um the nordstream 2
    pipeline was blown up and Russia
    demanded payments in Rubles that’s
    largely what happened and why we don’t
    have as much Russian natural gas in
    Europe so there no sanctions and
    something we’ve been calling for is that
    I mean we should introduce sanctions
    there should be kind of a maximum amount
    of Russian natural gas and there should
    be a European mechanism which says if we
    want to keep importing this gas it goes
    through this body at the European level
    which says this is the maximum you can
    have per year and there’s not any
    political appetite for doing this um so
    so not based on mean you’re asking if
    I’ve heard from industry this I haven’t
    heard from industry but I would share
    the same opinion that the pipelines are
    all still there the gas is really cheap
    Russia can’t send that gas anywhere else
    for now and the power of Siberia to
    which which should connect those fields
    to the it’s not happening and you would
    think I mean You’ think with a crisis
    they would have kind of expedited uh
    constructions exactly so all the gas is
    there it’s not so no I I see the same
    risk and my sense would be that’s a
    problem for signing long-term contracts
    uh for LNG whether that be of the US or
    Qatar is until you have kind of a
    legally binding political thing that
    says here we sign we will never Import
    in the future more than x BCM of Russian
    gas it will always be there um and in a
    scenario of political change I don’t see
    why it wouldn’t um play a role so I’ll
    also jump in to say that there is still
    Russian gas still flowing into Europe
    today um it was just looking at
    something which showed that I think
    Italy is importing three times more
    Russian gas today than it was in 2021 or
    2022 something like figger like that so
    it’s it’s still happening um I I I
    should also always preface my remarks I
    my remarks do not represent that of the
    Department of Defense or NATO this mind
    me speaking in my personal capacity as
    an academic um I spent many years living
    in Europe doing interviews um with uh
    particularly in Berlin with uh
    industrial consumers and their
    relationship with gas prom and I spoke
    recently with some of these um uh
    industrial producers in Germany in
    particular and they said that nothing
    was ever off the
    table um now of course these were the
    industries that were most closely
    associated with gas prom at the height I
    mean would you know have lunch with with
    gas fromom in Berlin you know three
    times a week um but yeah I think that
    when the rubber meets the road these
    companies care about cost and they care
    about remaining competitive and today’s
    current energy environment means that
    they are no longer competitive and so
    that if there is still a permissive
    environment that allows them to buy
    Russian gas in a way that’s not
    completely politically toxic for them I
    think that they will do
    that
    Andre so also in my personal capacity
    let’s say U I think yeah Russian gas is
    still flowing so there’s still some gas
    flowing through Ukraine right that will
    land at the end of this year basically
    the gas prone contract um at least this
    is what we know at the moment and LG is
    still Russian L gas is still flowing to
    Europe as far as I remember the numbers
    15% of it of the LG Import in Spain is
    is Russian 13% in in France or something
    like that so there there’s still Russian
    gas flowing to Europe and it may one of
    the next moves on the chess board from
    from K Lin so yeah we need to take take
    a look on what’s Happening next uh you
    know before understanding whether or not
    uh you know new contracts or new gas
    will will uh will will come back to to
    Europe from Russia yeah and I think Ben
    your your your suggestion of you like
    there are policy models perhaps to
    manage this um in the future should that
    future arise um any I’m going to open
    the floor to any any final questions
    here yeah uh almost all the discussion
    today has focused on gas and
    electricity uh with even one reference
    to to LNG being seen as a as something
    of a legacy fuel well what about a
    dinosaur fuel I mean the war in Ukraine
    has also disrupted Market in markets for
    petroleum products uh most particularly
    heavy
    distillates uh can does anybody have
    anything to say about
    that not not in depth I mean uh during
    the the crisis we looked gas and and
    crude markets and the threat I mean
    that’s crud not even distillates but the
    threat from from Russian disruption um
    and I mean before the Embargo on Russian
    oil which is an area where the EU did
    take action itself there was a big fear
    in Europe not comparable to natural gas
    but not not like orders of magnitude
    lower than natural gas it was felt that
    oil was almost as difficult to get off
    as natural gas and okay again for crude
    this maybe was a little bit harder but
    for crude it wasn’t that hard with with
    the ship trade you know Europe itself
    was able to get our riing crude oil um
    very quickly so I think that’s the I
    mean the sense in Europe was probably
    that for oil markets with the existence
    of things like the Ia that Europe was
    well prepared and was was well able to
    to diversify from Russian supplies um
    but on thiss particular I can’t really
    comment wait we we got a
    question thank Bob iort from the Atlant
    Council um there’s been more discussion
    in the US these days about the
    implications of cbam and what it means
    for the US um industry and trade um
    and I I don’t know too much about it Al
    it’s going to go into effect in early 26
    what what does it mean in terms of
    imports of energy uh domestic uh
    industry operations prices
    competitiveness
    Etc you have Ben Andre Emily anybody who
    would like to comment on
    CBM I can take
    it um so so the context is the the
    European emissions trading system which
    puts a carbon price on heavy industry
    and for about 15 years we’ve had free
    allowances so essentially your your
    steel plants your ammonia plants we gave
    them a carbon tax but we said here’s all
    the permits for free and you can trade
    them so we kind of created a market but
    it was a bit of a false one and about
    two or three years ago the this was the
    introduction of cbam um was to try and
    get rid of those free allowances um so
    that so they would face the real
    incidence of a carbon price that that’s
    the birth of cbam
    and I think that’s important to
    understand because especially the
    technocrats in Brussels really didn’t
    intend this at all as a tariff barrier
    as some kind of opposition and there’s
    some in the commission like tiar baton
    and others who kind of talk about we’re
    going to use all these money and raise
    all our own funds etc etc which I think
    is very damaging to the position and
    Europe hasn’t done a great job on on
    communicating that we want to put a
    carbon price on our heavy industry but
    we can’t do that unless we have some
    kind of protection at the border uh
    otherwise they’ll just all move away um
    so that that’s the context and what it
    means I think it’s in my sense a bit
    narrower Than People typically interpret
    it I mean it’s very specific uh energy
    and trade intensive Commodities things
    like steel things like aluminium uh
    things like ammonia where I
    mean the uh production in countries who
    don’t have a comparable carbon tax or
    comparable something else which creates
    huge complications with the states how
    you some of the permits and and these
    sort of things or the regulations here
    how do you how do you translate that
    into a carbon price so I don’t think
    we’re very far along I think there’s
    still a big challenge there um but for
    the states my my sense is it shouldn’t
    have you know assuming the states
    maintains kind of a a similar trajectory
    and decarbonization I wouldn’t have a
    sense it will have a huge impact and
    it’s more places like Indonesia or
    Morocco with cold fired steel where
    that’s really targeted at at having an
    impact okay so that’s it for us um thank
    you all for this wonderful discussion
    and we’re going to have uh this we’re
    going have another panel in a moment and
    then one more at the end of the day on
    Supply chains uh please uh welcome join
    me in giving my panelist a round of
    [Music]
    applause uh and now we’re going to talk
    talk more geopolitics uh than energy in
    climate uh this is sort of the the guns
    and bombs parts of the conversation
    today um with me on on the panel uh I
    have an excellent panel uh to my to my
    far left is Ian ler who’s vice president
    of GMS gmf of the global uh German
    Marshall fund South and executive
    director of the Brussels office uh Ian
    is the the vice president there he’s
    also served as the executive director of
    the Brussels office and leads the
    organization’s work on transatlantic
    relations uh and the Mediterranean in
    Turkey in his expertise includes US
    foreign policy and European and Middle
    Eastern security Affairs uh joining
    above me is uh Charlie cupin uh
    virtually uh Charlie is the is a senior
    fellow at the Council on Foreign
    Relations and a professor professor of
    international Affairs at Georgetown
    University uh he uh was from 2014 to
    2017 uh he served as special assistant
    to the president and senior director for
    European Affairs on the National
    Security Council in the Obama White
    House and prior to that his career has
    spanned the the Clinton Administration
    National Security Council the policy
    planning staff where I uh once served as
    well at the state department and at
    Princeton University uh and then uh
    we’re also pleased to have Anna uh Anna
    uh Bosa research staff member Science
    and Technology policy Institute and the
    institute for defense analyses uh she
    prior to that she was a senior fellow at
    Rice University’s Baker Institute where
    she co-led the program on energy and
    geopolitics in Eurasia uh and a senior
    fellow at the kimman Center for Energy
    policy at the University of Pennsylvania
    and I forgot to introduce myself I am
    Max Bergman I’m the director of the
    Europe Russia Eurasia program uh and I
    think this whole conversation that we’re
    having today is I think uh really about
    the fusion of the energy and climate uh
    issues with the the harder National
    Security uh defense topics that um we
    often times uh engage in I was in
    Ukraine a few weeks ago and one of the
    most depressing aspects was actually
    going to the energy Ministry and it’s
    not simply that the Ukrainian grid is
    being destroyed but it really hit me
    that probably one of the most for
    foremost e experts now on Russian
    missiles and drones and the impacts that
    they have is the energy Ministry that
    has seen Uh Russian tactics techniques
    and procedures evolve in how they are
    striking uh Ukraine’s energy grid uh
    this this war that’s now spanned after
    over two years has also seen the the
    explosion of of pipelines uh in Europe
    uh and has really remade uh Europe’s uh
    energy orientation some ways back to the
    United States or toward the United
    States but also to other regions and so
    I think there’s a lot here to discuss uh
    but Ian maybe I’ll start with you um you
    are a keen Watcher on all things Europe
    with your perch at gmf at at Brussels uh
    so in the two years since the war have
    you seen a real sort of paradigm shift
    with how Europe views energy energy
    issues energy security and how it views
    essentially Russian energy to pick up on
    a topic that we touched on at the last
    panel Max thank you very much and thanks
    very much for the invitation to be here
    it’s a fascinating discussion I a c just
    a couple of points maybe to about this
    one is that uh you know as an American
    sitting in Brussels uh you know this is
    very much something I follow um this is
    really a time of anxiety on all of these
    fronts in Europe I mean it’s absolutely
    palpable in Brussels uh and and there is
    an interaction as you say between the
    geopolitical anxiety the economic
    anxiety the energy Supply anxiety the
    competitiveness anxiety I mean and
    you’ve heard that in various ways I
    think from different speakers already uh
    but they but they do interact with and I
    would add even to that another anxiety
    which is anxiety about us if I can say
    about the United States and what’s
    happening about what’s happening here um
    I think you know just a couple of points
    one is I think what you’re seeing now
    really
    underscores um the aspiration on the one
    hand for strategic autonomy in different
    fronts including in the energy sphere uh
    in Europe uh and the gap between that
    aspiration and what is actually possible
    at least in the near term uh and expense
    and the time that it would take to
    actually get where Europe aspires to be
    especially on defense but also in many
    other sectors um there’s a huge gap
    there um and and you see it underscored
    in different ways and we’ve already
    talked about some of that the second
    point I’d make about that is that there
    are some real there’s an there’s an
    understanding that um that there are
    structural shifts there are structural
    Investments that or structural
    preferences that Europe had historically
    with regard to energy the head of the
    international Atomic energ International
    Energy agency the other day commented on
    this that the the long-term choices that
    Europe had made whether by Design or
    simply by practice of Reliance on
    Russian LG on the one hand and distaste
    for nuclear in many places on the other
    is has not served Europe well but to
    reverse those structural choices is not
    easy and not quick um and so I think
    there is some again some anxiety about
    this Al I think the green
    transition is is now under stress it’s
    in many ways been overtaken by a debate
    about
    competitiveness and surely these things
    are not irreconcilable but they’re not
    easily
    reconcilable something you know that I
    would also mention and it’s been
    mentioned by a number of your speakers
    is that um there has been a response to
    this Supply insecurity with regard to
    Russia that has reinforced north south
    connections now you know that’s taken
    many different forms in terms of
    connectivity um whether you actually get
    to a point where places like North
    Africa and but also in southern Europe
    are able to sort of fill this Renewables
    to export renewable energy I mean it’s
    been an aspiration for many many years
    whether this actually creates the uh
    sort of circumstances where it’s
    possible you know we’ll see the final
    you know maybe a final point if I if I
    have a moment um and that I think there
    is now um things are people are now
    discussing things that would have been
    Unthinkable a short while ago I mean
    when Joseph Burell talks about the
    possibility of a general war in
    Europe um this is extraordinary um and
    it doesn’t need to be by Design I think
    there is a growing sense that as there’s
    this open-ended quality this impass in
    Ukraine um that the accumulated risk of
    something simply going
    wrong that leads Europe NATO into an
    escalation that wasn’t necessarily
    intended but nonetheless leads you
    somewhere um is it’s it’s a very real
    thing and of course if we think about
    sort of the kinetic risks to energy
    infrastructure and other things under
    those conditions you have a very
    different very very different situation
    so you know and that could happen quite
    quickly so you get on the one hand this
    thinking about something at much greater
    scale in terms of a problem and at speed
    that no one wished to contemplate uh I
    can say more about the American piece of
    it and some other things we can come
    back to let let me just follow up
    quickly because you know one of the the
    I think Hallmarks of the Biden
    Administration and also with the
    European commission has been the the
    trade and Technology Council we actually
    haven’t heard much about it today
    because I think the the deliverables
    that the tangible deliverables that have
    come out of it um have have not been
    maybe as ambitious as what was expected
    or hoped for but do we have the right
    level of ambition you mentioned Europe
    pursuing it its own uh quotequote
    strategic autonomy on the energy side
    but it does strike me that we are in
    some ways have a lot to cooperate over
    here over the energy uh space that the
    uh Europe’s turning to uslg is one
    aspect of that but is there has the IRA
    created opportunities for cooperation or
    is it just created barriers uh and and
    annoyance or should we increase our
    level of ambition there uh between us
    and and EU I I I think you know European
    are keenly aware of the extent to which
    they’re now Reliant not necessarily in a
    negative way but anyway on on US Energy
    exports by the way that’s a was Return
    to a historic reality I mean until you
    know the late 1940s that was the US role
    was the leading energy supplier to
    Europe and and so it’s not a new thing
    for Europe to to experience that I think
    in a bigger sense whether you’re talking
    about Energy Technologies or many other
    things I would be concerned about this
    growing tension between economic
    nationalism in many places actually on
    the one hand and the desire the need
    even for greater Alliance cohesion in
    the face of what we’re we’re confronting
    with Russia but also with China in a
    different way you see this we’re talking
    about Europe here but you can see this
    with Japan too with the United States
    that you how do you reconcile those
    things and the T I think it’s one of the
    reasons why the TTC hasn’t functioned
    very well private sector is an enormous
    stakeholder in this because so many of
    the regulatory battles over whether
    you’re talking about data privacy or
    environmental regulations or many other
    things uh are being made in
    Brussels they’re being made in Brussels
    and if we had ttip maybe we would have a
    different kind of discourse about all of
    this but we don’t we can’t talk about
    ttip doesn’t doesn’t don’t talk about
    ttip that’s the transatlantic uh trade
    and investment partnership that that
    died during the Obama Administration and
    is everyone is afraid to bring it back
    up but but Anna I want to bring uh bring
    you in um you’re an expert on on uh
    energy security and the geopolitics of
    energy security how has the war impacted
    Europe overall are is you know European
    interaction not just with the United
    States but other regions of the world
    has has has been has increased maybe
    with the with the Gulf States in
    particular have you seen shifts or am I
    kind of stretching some of what what may
    happen how how would you assess how
    Europe has has evolved from an energy
    security perspective in the last couple
    years um I think at first you should
    probably underscore that Europe is not
    as uniform as we might often think if
    when we say in Europe right uh there’s
    the UK versus EU but there’s also the
    Western versus Eastern Europe um or the
    post Soviet Europe which um in my view
    has seen energy Security in particular
    from the perspective of dependence on
    Russia very differently than the west
    and that has been a historical
    perspective right the West has depended
    on Russian gas over the Cold War and
    nothing happened Germany was happily
    receiving gas since 1970s despite
    nuclear threats right so uh whereas uh
    countries uh in uh central eastern
    Europe have had uh experiences of gas
    not flowing after 1990s when they sto
    being under direct influence and that
    influence had to be uh replaced by other
    type of influences and that was uh in
    some uh in some cases uh push for um uh
    uh I mean basically uh using gas um as
    geop political weapon sometimes oil um
    uh as well but gas has been the easiest
    one because it was so regionally um uh
    focused um that changed with lmg of
    course and um and central eastern Europe
    has been talking about the issue of
    being dependent on Russian gas um and
    has been uh but to some extent it has
    been this kind of you know the boy who
    cries wolf uh because we’ve heard from
    Poland all the time and from Lithuania
    or laia don’t depend on Russian gas
    something’s going to happen and nothing
    was happening right so that kind of kept
    being discounted as the LA as the years
    progressed until it kind of came through
    uh in uh in the second invasion I think
    the first Invasion on Ukraine should
    have been a wakeup call it hasn’t been
    unfortunately um the second invasion
    something had to change um
    and I think
    that was The Awakening that in the
    Western Europe that energy security
    matters still that’s not kind of the the
    thing of the past uh that uh at some
    some points you will have to use every
    type of energy even if you don’t want to
    admit it uh that you might have to
    disassemble a wind farm to put a liite
    mine like Germany did um whether or not
    you’re going to be using it that that
    will be up to up to the Future um and
    and
    um however I think what was happening at
    uh in in reality um was accompanied by a
    different type of message the message
    was yes we have to do what we have to do
    this is expediency we need to go uh and
    uh create better future in terms of
    cleaner energy and so on I think these
    goals are there um now how they can be
    reconciled it will depend on whether
    Europe is able to create create this
    energy security scenario where it’s not
    only the accessibility and uh uh of
    energy and and but also affordability of
    it and and that’s what what what the
    previous panel was talking about can
    Europe be competitive um uh can Europe
    be uh uh be the leader um to some extent
    can Europe bring in the Clean Energy
    Future somewhere else or what it will do
    it will just discount the oil and gas
    for other countries by using more
    expensive energy um
    itself Charlie I want to bring you in uh
    you’ve been tracking uh the events uh in
    Ukraine very closely the events in the
    uh in in Moscow uh this strikes me as a
    clear case where Russia uh at least uh
    prior to the actual Invasion and then in
    the aftermath of the initial Invasion
    began to throttle its gas flows into
    Europe uh and while it’s sort of unclear
    what happened with the nordstream 1 and
    two pipelines that energy was being used
    as a as a geopolitical lever as a
    foreign policy tool for Russia uh how do
    how do you think that has fared and how
    do you think the Kremlin sort of views
    energy as a lever now as it sort of
    looks back on on the the crisis and and
    how do you what impact has that had on
    on European uh thinking when it comes to
    their own energy and National Security
    Charlie you’re you’re
    muted Thanks Max um wish I wish I could
    be there uh in person but we’ll we’ll do
    the best we can with remote um you know
    I I think that the that the
    Russians
    overestimated the their ability to
    weaponize
    energy and underestimated
    number one the nature and scope of the
    European response and number two the
    unity that has endured since February
    2022 within Europe and across the
    Atlantic and I think it’s understandable
    why they overestimated the utility of
    that weapon and the answerers Anna began
    to talk about it which is until February
    2022 it really didn’t look like the
    Europeans took seriously
    the Strategic vulnerabilities emerging
    from energy dependence on Russia uh and
    so the Russians saw what I think we
    could call complacency on that front and
    there was no complacency I think one of
    the the more striking features of the
    response that we saw emerge after the
    Russian invasion in February of 2022 was
    just how far and how quickly Europe has
    gone to wean itself off of of Russian
    energy yes there is there is still some
    Russian fossil fuel flowing into EU
    countries but there really has been just
    a fundamental
    transformation uh in where Europe gets
    its its energy in a way that has dried
    up the the dependence that we that we
    saw before and I think on on all three
    lines of effort not just the sanctions
    but aiding Ukraine economically and
    militarily and bolstering NATO’s Eastern
    flank I I am still struck by how much
    unity and solidarity there has been
    within Europe and across the Atlantic
    yeah there have been some bumps yes it
    took a long time for our Congress to
    approve the recent Aid package but the
    bigger picture is is one of of striking
    unity and solidarity that’s that’s the
    good news the bad news is that when you
    ask how effective
    has Europe’s reorientation of its energy
    supplies and the broader sanctions and
    let’s let’s be frank here you know this
    was the nuclear option we threw the book
    at Russia we went much further in terms
    of sanctions than I think the Biden
    Administration intended but it hasn’t
    really worked and the the Russian
    economy is doing okay mainly because
    Russia has simply moved its Supply
    Chains It’s selling energy to the ch
    Chinese to the Indians to others instead
    of getting imports from Western Europe
    they’re flowing in from turkey and
    Georgia and Central Asia and so the idea
    that somehow we were going to strangle
    Russia
    economically uh that didn’t work and I
    think we can we some can draw some
    important lessons there about just how
    hard it is to sanction big countries in
    a in a globalized world uh and that may
    require us to think hard and long about
    our policies toward China and the
    efficacy in general of this kind of of
    economic
    isolation uh a couple quick other points
    just to to end one is that I think the
    implications uh of our inability to
    really impose economic pain on Russia
    are number one that you know Russia has
    staying power that Russia’s population
    its economy its defense indust Ral base
    are
    performing uh you know at a level that
    that basically it requires us to say
    time is not on Ukraine’s side and I
    think we need to factor that in when we
    uh when we plot our strategy for where
    we go from here and the other important
    implication I think is that to the
    degree that there is a real loser in the
    economic implications of the of the
    sanctions it’s it’s it’s the global
    South where we have seen energy
    shortages High Energy prices food
    shortages and that in part explains why
    2third of the world effectively has not
    taken sides and is not getting on board
    when it comes to isolating Russia and
    that that’s an important conclusion I
    think to draw at a time when the US and
    China are are attempting to get an upper
    hand in in that part of the world my
    final comment
    I do think Max that despite the positive
    things that I’ve said about
    transatlantic unity and the
    effectiveness of of sanctions and the
    end of energy dependence I don’t think
    we’ve spent enough time talking about
    the long-term effects of those measures
    on
    us uh and if you were to say you know
    what do I most worry about moving
    forward it’s not Vladimir Putin it’s us
    it is the impact of high energy prices
    of German companies shutting down of
    millions of Ukrainian refugees on
    political moderation and ideological
    centrism in our own
    societies uh had we been on this call a
    couple years ago I would have said thank
    goodness the center is holding in
    Continental Europe I wouldn’t make that
    kind of statement today I don’t like the
    political trends that I see in France
    and Germany and I do think we need to
    have a more forthright conversation
    about how our policies toward Russia
    toward the Ukraine war in general even
    if working in the sense of helping
    Ukraine defend itself maybe undermining
    political centrism at
    home let me uh follow up because there’s
    one one area where we haven’t really
    gone after uh and that’s really the
    energy sector the Russian energy sector
    as mention that there aren’t actually uh
    sanctions against the Russian gas sector
    it’s just uh European countries have
    turned away from purchasing and and
    pipelines were exploded uh but the oil
    and gas with oil we have tried to put uh
    essentially create a mechanism with the
    Russian oil price cap to try to uh keep
    Russian oil on the market to keep Global
    prices oil prices low but to deprive
    Russia of Revenue the administration
    sort of defends uh the efficacy of this
    measure I think many other experts would
    say Well it hasn’t really impact uh how
    much revenue is going to the Kremlin
    um do you
    think you know your last comments the
    skepticism sanctions uh to I I I take
    that on board but looking at the Russian
    energy sector is that uh something that
    do you think we’ll see oil sanctions
    post an election if Biden were reelected
    is that an area where if you were in the
    white house where you know you’ve just
    won a won a reelection this is assuming
    a a a Biden victory that is Russian oil
    on something that should be looked at or
    is that too hard a lever to pull for the
    for the United States and and West in
    the west given concerns about political
    moderation yeah I mean I’m going to
    defer to to Anna and to Ian I think they
    have more expertise on uh detailed
    energy issues than I do but I would
    respond in the following way Max and
    it’s a it’s a very interesting question
    uh I think that the you know the price
    the cap has has to some extent worked to
    some extent not the real the real
    problem is that there are too many
    buyers uh of relatively cheap Russian
    energy to to in any way really put a a
    serious clamp on sales and their for
    income to the Russians and I’ll be you
    know just very instrumental in in my
    reply here you know if you’re in the
    White House and you’re running for
    reelection and you know that the
    American electorate is probably
    most concerned moving forward about
    prices about the cost of living and you
    know that perhaps the election could
    turn on the price of gas at the pump uh
    I think you’re going to You’re Going To
    Tread very carefully even after the
    election uh and I do think that yes
    inflation has slowed down but uh you
    know I don’t know about you Max but you
    know when I go trundling off to Trader
    Joe’s or Safeway to fill my fridge it’s
    still bloody expensive for bread for
    milk for eggs you know my at my local
    gas station it was it was down in like
    320 a few months ago it’s now close to
    $4 uh if you’re a if you’re a politician
    you are keeping a very very close eye on
    that sign on Connecticut Avenue about
    how much a gallon of G gas costs okay
    thanks and maybe back o over to you on
    that on that question um sure so um I
    think you know sanctions work if they
    everybody is on board if we have as uh
    uh as johnney mentioned here if we have
    other buyers willing to buy that um
    because um for for cheaper price that
    then the sanctions have an issue of
    course uh now Russia has also devel a
    considerable Shadow Fleet uh where
    sanctions kind of don’t uh don’t
    necessarily apply and that Fleet also is
    traveling around the world and and
    bringing in uh Russian Uh Russian oil um
    and products now some of that fleet has
    been purchased uh from European sellers
    uh so there is also that or other type
    of sellers uh so I think it’s it’s it’s
    a it’s a very sanctions are very
    difficult um I think to some extent they
    will work uh it’s just a very long term
    um and it’s very difficult to assess How
    would how they work because you have to
    basically compare it to
    counterfactual what would have Russian
    energy industry be in 10 years had there
    been no war and no
    sanctions um well uh probably better off
    than it will be um H but then again
    there are political versus economic
    issues and um in at least in my view the
    the the Russian government in particular
    Vladimir Putin doesn’t care as much
    about economy as much he cares about the
    ideological Bend of whatever he wants to
    achieve and um that’s what uh what
    drives him um some of the assessment
    I’ve heard about you know what will
    Russian industry be because of sanctions
    is well we’re not going to be as
    efficient we maybe going to be at 70 80%
    but we’ll still do fine uh because some
    of that um some of the uh you know that
    the uh the technology will bringing or
    or any some uh you know uh uh resources
    are going to be from China uh the
    question also is um are we willing to
    have Russia be a vessel state to China
    considering how we consider China a
    competitor to the West in general so
    that’s also something that that we have
    to kind of think about as we look
    through um what type of uh effect the
    sanctions have and how we imagine our
    world particularly at the time where
    where cooperation even within West is
    not as easy as as as we would like it to
    be yeah maybe over to you I mean my
    understanding is the oil price cap kind
    of came out of uh the administration
    being shocked that Europe
    was uh forging ahead on on sanctions on
    the Russian oil industry and that caused
    heart palpitations here in Washington
    and then hence the L price cap mechanism
    being sort of a a compromised solution
    That Was Then negotiated throughout
    2022 uh but how do you see this you know
    going forward you know I think you have
    to ask a fundamental question I think in
    different ways we’ve all hinted at this
    you know what did we want these
    sanctions to
    do uh and I mean in the most basic sense
    we we wanted somehow to change Russian
    policy uh on that basis at least so far
    it’s failed uh now you could argue that
    you could get to some threshold moment
    both in terms of both operationally on
    the ground and in terms of perhaps
    economic costs where where this would
    flip and you would see but you know I’m
    not so sure I mean I I would agree very
    much with what you said on it that you
    know that that that that the whatever
    his sort of ideological strategic
    objectives versus about Ukraine just
    simply Trump uh his concern about
    sanctions in this sector but that’s not
    the only thing sanctions do I mean
    sanctions can be a vehicle for cohesion
    among allies they can make you feel
    better they
    I’m no joke I mean this is there are
    people who’ have done long studies about
    the effectiveness of sanctions and you
    know there’s a reason why they work best
    with your
    friends you know so um I think I’m a
    little skeptical about that the leakage
    point I think is very important that you
    that you mentioned um another very
    interesting thing in terms of
    transatlantic relations on sanctions is
    I think it’s quite striking the extent
    to which the Biden Administration has
    had the European Union as the
    interlocutor on sanctions on export
    controls um
    that’s not necessarily an instinct that
    would have been shared by well many
    previous administrations of either party
    actually um and and that’s been that’s
    really noticed in Europe because in fact
    you’re dealing in terms of energy and
    also a lot of other rather politically
    existential issues in in in Europe
    including defense and and borders that
    actually aren’t EU competencies
    yeah it’s optional but we’ve chosen to
    view the EU as an interlocutor in this
    and and it’s been quite effective not in
    terms of necessar the effect of the
    sanctions but in terms of transatlantic
    cohesion around the policy it’s been
    quite effective uh I going to transition
    to another subject but before I do have
    to make a quick PL quick plug uh today
    we actually came out with a new report
    um at csas on uh looking at the impact
    of sanctions on Russia’s defense
    industry we did one last year it was
    called out of stock this year it’s
    called back in stock uh and and
    essentially Russia has found a way
    around s but really it’s been uh a huge
    increase in dual use components that are
    being exported by China the one thing
    however not to to to put to remove my
    moderator hat for a second I think the
    sanctions Defenders would say and I
    think I would agree with this is that
    they do disrupt and so if you’re when we
    talk about supply chain resilience and
    Supply chains being really important
    well when you’re trying to build when
    you have factories that are humming and
    you’re trying to do two and three shifts
    uh you know run 24 hours a day that
    machine tool breaks and then you need to
    figure out how to get it and instead of
    being able to go to the German supplier
    which you used to be able to do you know
    have to smuggle it well you can get it
    but it may take time and cause a degree
    of disruption which you know any little
    bit of friction May uh May in some ways
    have some some benefit but let me shift
    gears because one of the topics that I
    think came up uh earlier in some of our
    discussions I think is quite relevant
    and that is the the energy
    infrastructure that in that Europe has
    uh as not just being critical uh as we
    often times describe it but as also a
    potential Target uh and we have seen Uh
    Russian ESPN efforts and and active
    measures from assassination campaigns
    through uh targeting uh Czech ammunition
    uh Depot and after the after uh it’s
    Russia’s invasion of
    2014 uh and also critical infrastructure
    uh uh things happening uh over the last
    few years
    uh and it worries me that we don’t seem
    to now have a clear ability to deter
    these actions because we have sanctioned
    Russia endlessly we have put a a
    diplomatic isolation uh against Russia
    there’s very few tools that we have
    short of kind of military kinetic
    threats uh now to I think deter some of
    the more concerning kinetic actions I’m
    curious how you see this this challenge
    this threat maybe Charlie maybe I’ll
    I’ll start with you and then then go go
    backwards to the
    panelist yeah I mean it’s a it’s a very
    interesting question Max in the sense
    that we do seem now to be heading
    into uh an era in which both kinetic
    Warfare and hybrid Warfare does entail
    these kinds of efforts to disrupt
    critical
    infrastructure uh I mean if you look at
    what what the Russians are doing in
    Ukraine particularly in the absence
    of American air defense systems you know
    they’re they’re pounding infrastructure
    uh they’re trying to disrupt the energy
    uh flow the water flow uh and they’re
    being reasonably successful in ways that
    will take a significant toll on
    Ukraine’s ability to
    resist uh and to some extent we’ve seen
    similar activities by Israel in Gaza
    degrading uh core infrastructure uh and
    so it does seem to be coming to be be
    becoming more of a a kind of standard go
    after Target in in kinetic Warfare and
    at the same time uh it looks like it’s
    also an increasingly attractive Target
    in in non-kinetic scenarios where we
    have seen
    disruptions uh of energy infrastructure
    in in Europe and we’re also hearing
    about Chinese Andor Russian Andor
    Iranian
    efforts to implant ma malware in US
    critical infrastructure whether it’s the
    pipeline I think we had one instance in
    which there was a disruption in in
    pipelines but it could be in the in the
    energy grid uh and and and maybe we’re
    doing the same thing maybe we’re
    planting mware in Iran in russan I I
    don’t know uh but I do think that that
    this is a in some ways a an understudied
    underappreciated Dimension that we ought
    to we ought to be paying more attention
    to Anna curious for your thoughts being
    from Poland there’s been lots of
    activities that the polls themselves are
    are reporting on of of Russian activity
    against um against infrastructure
    throughout Poland but also uh but the
    energy infrastructure being being
    particular concern right no absolutely
    and it’s uh it’s it’s it’s not new the
    energy infrastructure has been um
    earlier in more nuanced way uh uh
    affected by by by by Russian at some
    point I think the uh oil for example
    that Russia was flowing to Europe uh it
    was flowing it at the Quality that
    polish refineries couldn’t refine it but
    the Germans could right so there’s
    there’s different ways in which things
    can be H can can be affected including
    infrastructures like refineries uh and
    um and today we see uh the attacks on
    generate generators um uh gas pipelines
    although not the trunk pipeline that
    flows Russian gas still uh to to Europe
    Austria or Slovakia through Ukraine
    through Ukraine absolutely uh that has
    not been uh bombed uh although the
    others one uh that flow would have flown
    gas um to to the local population or the
    storage recently has been has been
    attacked but what it
    predominantly should give us uh kind of
    should should should make us think of is
    well what can we do to prevent uh uh
    these attacks and one thing to do to
    prevent is to prepare for them so they
    don’t have the effect that they that
    that the attacker intense so they don’t
    uh prevent the flow of energy and or at
    least not uh uh that can be um or at
    least that we can fix it really really
    quickly so how do we design our our uh
    energy systems uh one thing that I think
    of um you know what are we going to do
    if we Electrify everything are we going
    to be more resilient or are we going to
    be more exposed if so how how can we
    make sure that by attacking our grid we
    are not turning off everything that we
    basically uh uh use to live um so heat
    water and so on and our cars and so on
    and so on so as we I think you know
    there is little that we can do right now
    um probably immediately but thinking
    about designing um our Energy Future
    that’s extremely import
    important well I you know it just puts
    me in mind of the comment that was made
    in an earlier session about you know
    being one click away from a very very
    big problem uh as a result of this I
    mean of course I mean I think it’s also
    worth you know thinking about the fact
    that this these are very old strategies
    I mean since the dawn of the Industrial
    Revolution people have been thinking of
    ways to
    of economic Warfare in this respect and
    if there’s a lesson from all of that it
    seems to me is that given enough time
    and and you know enough Focus you can
    fix almost anything uh money to you know
    and and if you’re willing to devote the
    resources and shift the economy around
    in such a way that you that you’re going
    to fix it I and there’s a lot of
    capacity for adaptation it’s arguably
    grown uh maybe even exponentially in in
    recent years as as the sort of
    intellectual inputs and the
    technological inputs as opposed to the
    resource inputs have become much more
    important um so I wouldn’t you know sort
    of overestimate our our
    vulnerability um but you know clearly
    it’s something worth watching not least
    because you know I think we see with
    Putin in various respects whether we’re
    talking about the kinetic piece of this
    or other things you know just factoring
    this element of ruthlessness which even
    during the Cold War frankly we never
    really had a a kind of you know element
    in the nuclear balance called
    ruthlessness if anything we had the
    opposite which was a degree of caution
    um and and that we don’t see now and
    then it could get much more complex
    because of the use of proxies who carry
    out these kinds of attacks I mean in
    some ways what we’re seeing in the Red
    Sea may be more instructive for what
    we’re talking about than the
    consequences of what’s happening between
    Russia or as consequential as in terms
    of
    lessons Charlie it seems like part of
    what we’re talking about is building a
    degree of resilience and treating the
    energy sector or potentially treating
    the energy sector more uh as kind of as
    not just a national security priority I
    think we would all agree that a national
    security priority but you know part of
    what the militaries do is do ton of
    planning about what events could go
    wrong and they stockpile weapons
    hopefully never to use th those weapons
    they’re essentially you know hopefully a
    stranded asset but do we need to maybe
    think a little bit more about the energy
    sector in similar ways to try to boost
    our resilience having Transformers
    having generators having other equipment
    that perhaps uh uh solar panels that
    could be uh brought for hospitals to
    maintain energy infrastructure this need
    to be part of our kind of deterrent
    strategy effectively so that no
    adversary will even bother trying to hit
    our energy infrastructure because it
    would make no point there would be no
    point to doing so is that something that
    we need to start doing or am I kind of
    overhyping some of the the threats or
    concerns
    you’re you’re muted
    Charlie uh no I don’t I don’t think
    you’re overhyping Max I I think that
    given what what we’re witnessing taking
    place in Ukraine in Europe we do need to
    build in redundancy we need to have you
    know pipelines that uh that may not be
    essential because the existing one is
    adequate but you put in a second one
    just in case something happens uh so I
    do think that that Prudence does require
    moving in this direction and I thought
    Anna asked a good question you know if
    we if we Electrify if all of our
    transportation is based upon batteries
    in charging what are the implications
    for that does that does that make it
    easier or harder to to disrupt uh but I
    I don’t think that it’s just a question
    of building in redundancy and and
    resilience
    there are a whole host of issues that I
    I also think we need to to think long
    and hard about trying to forge a set of
    rules of the road and here I’m not just
    talking about attacks on energy I’m
    talking about cyber War the the
    different uses of uh of cyber tools to
    disrupt uh civilian Society you know
    there’s this whole new realm out there
    where you know we don’t even have our
    own guidance system we don’t have our
    own rules of the road you know we don’t
    have our own legislation Congress has
    yet to pass a single piece of
    legislation on regulating the digital
    Arena U and so I think that is another
    area where we have to develop our own
    set of uh of guiding rules and norms and
    try to socialize them first with allies
    but not just with allies also with
    adversaries I think it’s a great great
    point I want to move to questions from
    the audience in a minute but before I do
    so everyone think about their questions
    uh Anna any any comments on on Charlie’s
    point I mean look there are people in
    the room who know a lot more about this
    than I do but I would have thought that
    the more the more diversification the
    more distribution you have in terms of
    critical infrastructure the better that
    and if it if you get that with for
    example increasing Reliance on
    Renewables or or distributed generation
    or whatever it might be uh it just gives
    you much more resilience and redundancy
    I would have thought uh than having uh
    you know less sophisticated grids that
    that are centralized and and and all the
    rest of it I me I mean it also has
    there’s something to say here about the
    nuclear power industry too and there are
    people who know a lot about that and I I
    don’t yeah but and maybe I’ll just go to
    you on the threat it how how serious do
    you think the threat is essentially to
    Europe’s energy infrastru structure uh
    from from Russia presently is this
    something that you should be concerned
    about should not be concerned about
    should be overly concerned about how I
    mean how panicked or not should well
    there’s a lot of things that Europe has
    to be concerned about it so Panic is
    probably not the best idea uh otherwise
    they would just we you know uh um really
    in trouble uh but um there has to be
    concern we’ve seen
    explosions in the Baltic Sea we’ve seen
    a Baltic interconnector being disrupted
    by an anchor and some of uh of uh cables
    underwater cables uh that that had also
    been cut um now we don’t know
    uh what force has done that there are
    different theories and and different
    opinions on that but doesn’t matter who
    has done uh uh who who who who has done
    the actions these need to be uh
    considered and um uh having most of the
    gas that goes to or all of the gas that
    goes uh from Russia to Germany being cut
    off that that’s an that’s an issue that
    uh Germany was lucky to be able to deal
    with uh based on its uh its associations
    with other uh other countries in Europe
    uh so I think it has to be one an
    important part of energy policy uh now
    as it was mentioned energy policy is not
    in the preview of per perview of of EU
    it’s actually depends on each and single
    country and and that’s and that’s an
    issue because every country in Europe
    has a different idea of how that energy
    security should look like um Germany
    doesn’t like a nuclear power uh to be in
    uh Poland is introducing nuclear power
    right on the border of Germany um France
    is building it up back of uh its nuclear
    power power so um you know Spain has a
    huge amount of LG import terminals but
    doesn’t have a way of connecting it to
    the rest of the of of Europe so it’s not
    able to bring it and France is not
    seeing like uh seeing this you know the
    same uh need for for for pipelines so uh
    I think while the solidarity between
    different European countries has existed
    in the in the face of threat there is a
    need for more of it it so the threats
    like uh threats to energy infrastructure
    can be addressed great well let me see
    if there’s any questions for the
    panelists if not I’ll ask one more any
    any questions for for our panelists yes
    please I’m Bob Hershey I’m a consultant
    uh from the things that the US and
    Europe are doing now would you keep them
    doing the same thing or you do something
    different
    great question
    in tough question question extremely
    difficult it’s extremely difficult to
    answer I mean I I think look there are
    there are you have to make some
    long-term assumptions and you have to
    hope that they’re well informed and
    correct because we’re talking about
    policies and Investments and decisions
    that are not only very expensive but
    very consequential over time and very
    difficult to reverse and uh and so you
    need to make some
    some decent assumptions about the
    long-term relationship with Russia also
    with China we’re not so much talking
    about that and some other things and
    across the Atlantic because if some of
    those big picture variables are changed
    are different the decisions that you
    would make on some of these questions
    that we’re discussing would look very
    different if you don’t trust the us as a
    supplier you’re going to go in a
    different direction if you think that
    you’re going to wind up in a kinetic war
    between NATO and Russia you’re going to
    make some choices about uh resilience of
    your infrastructure that you might might
    not make otherwise because you do as we
    were saying before we started this
    session have people in industry but not
    just in Germany but not just who are who
    are just waiting for this thing to get
    settled so they can go back to a nice
    house politique and some relatively
    secure cheap energy from Russia and and
    Away you go
    um we have elections coming up which
    will influence some of this stuff too
    so and
    Charlie let me actually just pick up on
    the last the point Ian made to to ask uh
    our panelist do you see a scenario or
    scenarios in which Europe turns back to
    purchasing the stranded Russian gas that
    is sitting there and if so what would
    have to happen because I I think in the
    present State I do not see a scenario in
    which that happen or do not see that
    happening but I could Envision future
    scenarios in which a lot changes but I’m
    curious how how how you well Austria is
    still buying of Russian gas like 100% of
    its use at times right Slovakia the same
    so as as the previous panelist mentioned
    uh Europe has not sanctioned Russian gas
    it’s Russia sanctioned it Gast against
    some countries like Poland or Bulgaria
    for example um but um Europe hasn’t so
    that’s one indication if there is a need
    there’s a will right uh however I think
    uh the situation has changed uh so if at
    any given point Russia will there will
    be situation where Russia is able to uh
    to trade back with Europe uh H and it
    could be Russian gas potentially or um
    as some maybe hydrogen uh blue hydrogen
    that Russia is encouraging its companies
    to uh to produce um then the idea would
    be that this Russian gas cannot at any
    given point become a weapon MH right so
    uh and this was not the case um and
    written before that uh uh you know how
    do you do this well you have enough
    redundancy you have enough suppliers so
    at any given time you can replace the
    gas that’s coming from Russia with some
    uh with with something else electricity
    gas whatever else it is uh so Russia
    doesn’t have that that card right so it
    cannot play that card anymore and then
    it becomes the normal supplier uh that
    everybody else is um if that’s the case
    I mean do we really want to have this
    compl completely unfunctional huge
    country on the on the European border
    that potentially as I’ve mentioned is a
    vessel to a vessel state to China and uh
    I mean probably it’s a it’s an issue uh
    so um it’s a very it will require a huge
    amount of careful consideration um but
    yeah okay I would just add Max that
    please I think the you know if you look
    at the likely outcomes in
    Ukraine most of them involve some kind
    of Frozen conflict or semi Frozen
    conflict with Russia keeping grab of at
    least some chunk of Ukrainian territory
    for for a while and it’s hard for me to
    imagine that under those
    circumstances you could ever get the us
    or the EU to seriously scale back
    sanctions so I other than you know a
    change of regime in Russia Putin is gone
    there is some new regime that that is a
    very of a very different ilk I don’t I
    don’t see that return to
    normaly uh I think that one of the
    questions that that this analysis begs
    is can we keep the sanctions in
    effectively have no serious economic
    relationship with Russia but still at
    some point deal with
    issues that we need to deal with them on
    like strategic stability like nuclear
    arms control uh like uh you know things
    to prevent a a wider conflict between
    NATO and Russia uh but given where we
    are in in Ukraine I think any return to
    economic normaly is far off in the
    future this is a kind of microcosm of
    the debate over der risking with
    China in a sense I mean it’s slightly
    different but not entirely you know um
    you do you want to do you want to even
    if we don’t there’s a lot that we can
    complain about and a lot that we don’t
    you know don’t want to excuse um I I
    agree with Charlie about the the near
    maybe to medium term but over the longer
    term I mean is it a safer world if you
    have no economic interdependence and uh
    completely free floating relationship
    when it comes to strategic stability
    nuclear understandings about nuclear
    strategy all of this probably not um so
    you know over longer term can you simply
    ignore this relationship again probably
    not and I think a lot in more than in
    the United States a lot in in Germany
    many other places in Europe even in
    France despite the toughening of
    attitudes uh are are looking ahead to
    that because there’s a long history
    there there’s a long history there no I
    I I completely agree and I think that
    the uh looking down the road I mean Arms
    Control between the US and Russia is
    currently uh on dead it’s currently dead
    it’s not even on life support however uh
    can be as soon as there’s potential for
    um negotiations if there is potential
    for negotiations Arms Control gets
    resurrected because that is the the
    foundation for which you have these
    sorts of conversations and at that point
    then if you are on a road to building a
    more stable relationship than the energy
    side I think down that road could could
    potentially be a topic but there’s a
    long path uh I I think to to head on
    head head in that direction so uh but
    with that um I we’ll take uh hands
    popped up in the last second we have a
    few more minutes uh
    Amy we we take two question primarily
    for Charley but also maybe Ian if he’s
    will to answer it which is where do you
    think we stand in terms of deterrence
    has the United States lost its ability
    to create a deterrence internationally
    do we we have a deterrent do you see we
    have an active deterrence uh in the
    balance with the with Russia and did you
    see the exchange between Israel and Iran
    directly as a manifestation of the fact
    that the United States Global deterrence
    is faltering or you think that’s too
    pessimistic why don’t we take the the
    second
    question thank you um we we’ve talked
    about the um uh Europe uh
    diversification of gas in terms of LG
    shifts um I I think there’s still an
    issue though with regards to the nature
    of that diversification strategy and it
    relates to the fact that the West has
    put a tremendous amount of effort in
    developing the southern gas
    Corridor and uh and the plans are to
    expand that Corridor and to increase
    supplies from
    aaban which of course ALS also runs the
    risk of in a sense Russia’s actions in
    Georgia and in the future and what that
    might mean for security of those
    supplies as well as the issues related
    to what to do about Turk stream and
    Russia’s control over Turk scream which
    is important in terms of their leverage
    over Serbia and Hungary so I was
    wondering in in that context do you have
    any sort of thoughts about that aspect
    of diversification and uh how important
    it is to continue down that route uh and
    is there anything we can do about Turk
    stream in Turkey yeah great great
    questions and we will Charlie we’ll
    start with you and we’ll go through or
    uh with each panelist and I encourage
    everyone to be brief so we can stay on
    schedule so
    Charlie yeah to the question about
    deterrence I think the American
    deterrent is in pretty good shape for
    for the following several reasons one is
    that I think the policy toward Ukraine
    has been about right in the sense that
    Biden made the Judgment early on that
    Ukraine was not worth World War III and
    that we were therefore not going to go
    to war with Russia or enforce a noly
    zone or do other things that would put
    US forces in direct conflict with
    Russian forces but we’ve gone pretty far
    in helping Ukraine defend itself uh the
    country still holds 80 plus per of its
    territory and I’m guessing now that more
    Aid is going to arrive it will be able
    to to hold the line you’ve got NATO two
    new members a lot more Firepower and
    capability on the Eastern flank I think
    that the Chinese have been watching
    what’s happened to Russia for invading
    Ukraine and they don’t like that story
    they don’t want to go down that rabbit
    hole I think the response uh of the West
    to the Russian invasion of Ukraine makes
    a Chinese attack against Taiwan less
    like
    and the Biden administration’s efforts
    to tighten the alliance system South
    Korea Japan the Philippines Aus deal
    with
    Australia I would say that that uh bit
    broader extended deterrence is in is in
    pretty good
    shape I’ll defer on the energy questions
    to Anna and
    Ian uh
    I think the diversification is is is
    progressing as I said yes the the
    Turkish stream is working full for
    throttle uh and uh the AER gas is
    Flowing as well there has been a push
    from the European Union to bring more of
    that gas uh but the question is uh is a
    question of financing additional
    pipelines and building them and for
    aeran to do it it would have to have the
    assurance that that gas is going to
    be sold for a you know and bought for
    long long time to be uh whereas European
    Union’s uh policies are such that they
    want to you know uh uh have this only as
    transitional fuel so there is this
    disconnect uh probably European Union
    would have to uh Finance most if not all
    of it in order for this to happen um
    that I guess remains to be seen although
    thanks to a relatively successful kind
    of last two years of no serious energy
    crisis it it seems to me less likely
    than it was at the very beginning when
    Europe signed several agreements with
    with
    aeran um there’s also the issue of
    potentially uh leaking of Russian gas
    through through other sources including
    through aeran who just signed a contract
    for one BCM of gas with Russia right so
    it’s a matter of displacement uh so
    these things these things uh these
    things uh these things could happen
    however there are serious uh um uh off
    uh diversification uh efforts uh the
    Kirk terminal that’s expanding with
    Hungary bringing in uh quite a lot of
    that degasified uh uh deified uh uh fuel
    uh uh to its borders um as well as the
    Greek terminal uh and then increasing
    interconnections uh both in terms of
    electricity as well as gas
    interconnections between different
    countries so Poland Ukraine Poland
    Slovakia um uh and and uh Lithuania
    actually has been just uh connected with
    with Poland through the uh uh through
    pipeline which is like the first
    connection on uh um on land connection
    between the Baltic republics and and the
    rest of Europe uh with gas so that’s
    that’s important uh and that the
    interconnections will help
    diversification because it will help
    balance the system so you don’t have to
    have as much of gas but you can move it
    uh around
    maybe just a last thought on the
    deterrence question uh you know I I I
    would agree with Charlie that I think
    overall as a kind of net assessment that
    that we’re still in a relatively we the
    West if You’ like to say nato is still
    in a relatively strong position when it
    comes to deterrence if you’re thinking
    about deterrence in terms of deterring a
    direct
    Russian
    uh threat to Nato territory beyond the
    war in Ukraine if you like or even
    thinking about it in terms of of the
    situation in Ukraine perhaps but
    certainly in terms of a further
    territorial threat to Europe I you know
    I I find that that pretty pretty hard to
    contemplate I think I think he is
    deterred in that sense what I do worry
    about two other things I worry about
    things going wrong as I said earlier uh
    inadvertent escalation miscalculations
    accidents and the longer the conflict
    goes on the accumulated risk of this it
    seems to me is very significant uh
    includ you know directly implicating
    NATO um the other piece about it is that
    as this goes on uh we know less and less
    about Russian intentions we’re not
    learning more the the the questions are
    just piling up and I have to assume not
    that we’re trying to be mysterious that
    who knows he may have the same feeling
    about us you know during the Cold War we
    knew very well we had a very good
    understanding about what was stabilizing
    and what was destabilizing we may not
    have agreed about the outcome we wanted
    in the world but there were no Mysteries
    there really uh and now we have lots of
    mysteries and lots of potential for
    miscalculation and and I would worry
    about that more than the the
    fundamentals of of deterrence although
    again we never really priced in
    ruthlessness as an element to deterrence
    and that’s clearly what we confront
    today well I really uh want to want to
    thank you all I think it was a
    fascinating conversation uh as someone
    who’s been in Washington for 20 years if
    this conversation happened 20 years ago
    I think we’ve been fixated on on the
    Middle East on on Gulf oil and I think
    it sort of demonstrates how the
    conversation has really uh evolved when
    it comes to energy security and
    geopolitics uh but please join me in in
    thanking our our
    [Applause]
    panelists and we will be taking a a
    short break as we transition and then
    we’ll be back for our final uh panel on
    uh Supply chains
    [Music]
    all right uh welcome back everyone again
    I’m Joseph mik I’m the director of the
    energy security and climate program here
    at csis I’m very excited to round out uh
    what has been an incredible day we’re
    going from the energy RI the risks
    associated with uh cyber security and
    EVS to the nature of the US’s deterrent
    power in its relationship with Russia
    we’ve we’ve covered a lot of ground and
    on on this last panel I think we want to
    start talking talking about the one of
    the key Concepts that we heard right at
    the start of the day right the story of
    the last two years in Europe has been uh
    a shift toward Renewables is seen as a
    way off of Russian gas dependence uh
    there is concern held by many that you
    then kind of trade one dependence for
    another right especially given Supply CH
    chain supply chain concentration in
    China with respect to a lot of the goods
    of of the clean energy economy and so
    I’ve got three people here to talk about
    that issue how real those risks are and
    what we can actually do about them in a
    practical and economical way um and
    we’re I’m really we’re all going to
    benefit from their expertise directly to
    my left is Roger Martella he’s the chief
    sustainability officer at General
    Electric vnova
    uh and and Roger has a long and story
    career as a general counsel at the usepa
    and the doj and um and he’s got I think
    a lot to share with us on this kind of
    nature of what these Supply chains are
    going to look like in the future future
    Andrew Wills is the senior vice
    president for federal Affairs at
    invenergy a large Energy company with a
    with a global pre footprint um Andrew’s
    also bringing a lot of uh is bringing
    prior government experience he was the
    chief of staff for cyber security energy
    security and emergency response at the
    US doe until just about a year ago is
    that correct that’s right great so I’m
    very excited to hear your thoughts on
    this in this regard and then Elena jopu
    is the uh Chief strategy offer at bpc um
    Elena’s got a long career working at a
    Europe in the energy finance and
    Analysis space including stint at BF um
    so thank you all for joining us I want
    to actually start with Al Lena and then
    we’re going to work our way this way um
    trading one dependence for another from
    the perspective of a utility how how
    should public policy makers and analysts
    think about the the risks that you guys
    see and what you’re planning for in the
    medium-term and the long term with
    respect to sort of the the shifting
    nature of of Supply chains and the
    shifting Energy
    Mix uh first of all thank you for for
    the question it’s exciting to to hear
    everything that has been said earlier on
    um there is let me start with energy
    Security in the sense that the system is
    changing it was said everyone knows that
    we move from a fuel based system to a
    Technology based one but this change is
    not happening overnight in the sense
    that you need to manage the the risks
    and the complexities both of a fuel
    based system because we are still using
    fossil fuels and as we are planning our
    transition to a Technology based one
    where materials equipment manufacturing
    uh capacity critical raw materials are
    key um in this sense
    we all right okay okay okay good um as a
    utility of course we are trying to
    diversify our portfolio we are trying
    both in terms of Technologies and in
    terms of geographies because there is a
    lot of complimentarity that we can
    leverage if we operate in different
    systems and of course this has a big
    impact on the energy security of a
    country and the region like Europe um
    but at the same time what is very very
    important for us to understand is how
    there is stability in the region in
    order to make sure that a we have access
    to the equipment and we are not going
    experience a similar situation uh at a
    very high cost that we experienced in 20
    uh 22 and secondly that there are the
    economic signals on the market that will
    keep us going uh with our investments
    that will contribute to the Net Zero uh
    transition that Europe has set as as a
    Target so um let’s let’s jump to Andrew
    Andrew you know you were looking at the
    sort of this security of supply for the
    us when you were at the doe now you’re
    working in in in the private sector how
    do you rate these different things our
    conversation today has gone from sort of
    like availability of materials in the
    critical mineral space to the the the
    the sort of mechanisms necessary for
    clean energy to then cyber security
    where where do you kind of see the
    emerging definition of energy security
    going yeah At Doe thanks for the
    question um At Doe we spent a lot of
    time thinking about how do you define
    energy security because it really could
    be all things which you just said it it
    is all things uh but you can also try to
    PVE a narrow a path it reminds me when
    we were talking about the term
    resiliency what does resiliency mean and
    who owns it it’s kind of hard to
    describe about what it is and I think
    the same thing is true for energy
    security we at inv energy I think um for
    those of you who don’t know and I didn’t
    see this morning uh we’re a clean energy
    developer owner and operator based in
    Chicago uh we’re definitely the the US’s
    largest and probably the world’s largest
    private Clean Energy company and I think
    our owner Michael psky has done a good
    job at following where this is needed
    following where there’s a demand
    following the market signals uh you know
    when he built the company in in the
    early 2000s it was perpa had just
    changed the markets and so we were
    building gas and then the credits came
    along and he was building wind and now
    we’re at a place where we really have to
    look at sort of all the above and so
    that’s what we’re doing we have gas
    assets and right now here domestically
    we’re really focusing on getting power
    from where we have it which is as we all
    know uh for Renewables usually in rural
    areas where there’s not a lot of people
    to where we need it so we’re focused on
    longdistance high voltage direct current
    transmission um to to your question from
    The Experience At Doe I I I don’t even
    want to try to to uh quantify or qualify
    risks I think they’re all important and
    I think we have to be paying attention
    to all of them at the same time um and
    then let’s come to Roger and you know
    vova is it GE or vnova GE vnova GE vnova
    is is you know there equipment supply
    right so you know a lot of the political
    narrative is we can we move to a world
    of wind and solar the resources are
    right here the supply chain is like very
    very short uh but that’s perhaps a
    hollow uh transition if you don’t have
    the ability to have the inverters the
    wind turbines the Nels all of the all
    the equipment necessary to scale up that
    clean energy economy you know G’s G’s in
    the space like what what do you see as
    you know government activity in in with
    regard to these risks are they well
    characterized and then how do we resolve
    them economically well Joseph first of
    all thanks for hosting us and inviting
    us and having this critical conversation
    at this critical time and I I guess
    there’s two things so gnova is a company
    that innovates the technology that helps
    produce 30% of the world’s energy right
    very Diversified renewable energy
    conventional power grid equipment and
    then breakthrough Technologies like
    small modulor reactors carbon C capture
    hydrogen so we’re kind of in the whole
    supply chain in in over 100 countries
    30% of the world’s energy 880,000
    employees and I guess maybe two things
    I’d say I I think one thing about energy
    security frankly I wish we didn’t have
    to be here have a conversation on energy
    security I think we’d all prefer that
    well
    but but um but it has driven I think a
    return to pragmatism when it comes to
    the grid and power a few years ago was
    like picking winners and losers and we
    didn’t like that we were very much on
    the record like we think it’s still all
    of the above um and I think we’ve seen
    as a result of the the focus on energy
    security this return to pragmatism where
    we’re not picking one versus other it’s
    come to more of the all of the above
    government policies aligning to that
    couple exceptions out there we think
    that’s a positive thing from a supply
    chain perspective though that is where
    the challenge whether you’re talking
    about Renewables gas power nuclear and
    these breakthrough
    Technologies um energy security Ukraine
    has been a wakeup call even for us like
    when when we stepped up with Ukraine we
    wanted to and we continue to be one of
    the strongest Partners to make sure
    nothing is more important to us than
    keeping the lights on in Ukraine but we
    started to realize right away like we
    don’t have this equipment sitting on
    shelves we don’t have it in some
    Warehouse or an inventory we look around
    we have years and years of backlog we’re
    talking with some of our colleagues here
    about delivering technology 2020 20 27
    28 29 30 and and so we came to this
    fundamental like this is not only an
    energy security issue it’s a national
    security issue are we ready for whether
    it’s cyber security weather events the
    growing demand um and all this
    infrastructure to to be able to address
    this so we’re having very serious kind
    of boardroom level discussions as well
    as with our public sector colleagues
    from a national security imperative how
    do we make sure we have a supply chain
    how do we have strategic reserves of
    those types of equipment because we have
    years of backlog and how do we build
    that capacity we have to be fast and we
    have to be smart so we’re at the
    beginning eror of that but I do think
    because of energy security we’ve woken
    up to this reality that the current
    situation is not sustainable the
    capacity is critical and we need to
    solve for that both in collaboration
    with the private sector and the public
    sector so let’s turn to the
    transatlantic cooperation a little bit
    if we can I mean a big part of the story
    from the last two years was us LNG can
    can arrive in in Europe and keep you
    know really helped resolve the the
    crisis that Europe faced and that you
    know we like that was not a cost-free
    thing but but it by and large worked now
    but it was like a market driven thing
    like like you know politicians on both
    sides want to claim a lot of credit for
    it but like largely it happened through
    the price mechanism so I’d be really
    interested to hear uh Roger kind of how
    you see transatlantic cooperation or
    like you know kind of strategic allies
    working together to build the kind of
    capacity you describe right whether it’s
    manufacturing capacity whether it’s
    stockpiling equipment what are the what
    are the places of activity we should
    look for where does the government need
    to set its efforts well I think there’s
    a lot of good discussions going on
    there’s a lot of transatlantic
    coordination at the highest levels of
    government among really smart people and
    Europe UK US I think they see the energy
    security issue I think they see the
    national security issue and there’s a
    lot of questions about China’s
    opportunities and advantages and how do
    we right you know prepare ourselves for
    that so we’ve gotten very strong
    advocacy cooperation collaboration from
    Partners on all sides now it’s not a
    Level Playing Field when it comes to
    policy between the US and the EU it has
    swung the EU has historically LED in the
    space I think everybody understands that
    the US has the momentum with the
    inflation reduction act we see more EU
    companies wanting to build factories
    here than we see us companies kind of
    running to the EU we want to we want to
    address that and I I think to the credit
    of the European Union they were kind of
    antagonistic in the early days of the
    inflation reduction act now they’re like
    help us understand what we can learn
    from the us so we can duplicate that
    here how do we build that domestic
    supply chain how do we create those
    incentives that may be a little
    different and we’re very very happy to
    have that conversation we don’t think
    this should be a us-centric effort and
    now we see the flow of information going
    back that way so it’s not just about
    deploying technology in Ukraine LG and
    other places how do we build that strong
    economic base in the EU supply chain
    Workforce Development right so that they
    get the same economic opportunities and
    benefits so that’s a big focus at the
    moment I mean we love to see Europeans
    go from annoyed with with Americans to
    inspired by Americans right that like
    not that they would admit it
    but um but then you know the question
    becomes how do we avoid duplicative
    effort right like you know we don’t want
    to be competing against each other to
    build the the wind turbines or the you
    know the components for inverters or you
    know so like that’s where I think the
    kind of government to government
    communication is going to become
    essential so we’re not in this like kind
    of battle for you know who can be the
    most protectionist who you know who who
    who’s going to like win the subsidy
    fight but that were sort of coordinating
    or complimenting each other based on
    strengths um Andrew I’d love to bring
    you into this conversation as well given
    in Energy’s footprint kind of like how
    do you see the the um the private sector
    playing a role in helping to kind of
    like create demand for th that kind of
    cooperation yeah no I love that question
    and I think I think that is happening uh
    we don’t have to do anything about it at
    this point I think the in the government
    incentives through the IRA have already
    inspired along with ESG efforts and
    other kind of uh just demand from
    customers you’re seeing companies that
    want to invest in this technology and in
    this this new power um and I think that
    is kind of like the rising tide that
    that sort of lifts all boats so we
    already are seeing the demand now it’s
    just a matter of executing and that’s
    where um people like Roger and his and
    his team and his folks uh ge are helping
    uh inventery I think I mentioned to you
    earlier inventergy built um this year a
    solar manufacturing facility that is the
    country’s largest single site solar
    manufacturing facility of modules in
    Ohio and we’re producing by the end of
    the year 5 gaw of solar modules um it’s
    going to take a long time to onore the
    whole supply chain for solar but I do
    think there’s an opportunity for folks
    like assistant secretary Patt over at
    the state department and his team to
    work collaboratively with other nations
    and and how we can uh sort of frore our
    components that are needed because to
    your point we can’t dup duplicate these
    efforts it takes too long to build a
    polysilicon factory and a and a wafering
    and wafering in facility and a cell
    manufacturing facility we can’t
    duplicate we have to do it together
    Elena you you know I’d love to he bring
    you back into the conversation on sort
    of how you see the conversation evolving
    with your peers in Europe and with
    European policy makers as well with
    respect to you know sort of being
    inspired by the IRA but but also sort of
    you know here in the US there’s a
    there’s a lot of hesitancy around you
    know Chinese dominated Supply chains you
    know I I I think Europe the picture is a
    little more mixed kind of what’s the
    state of play right now so what what we
    need to keep in mind is that the targets
    we have in Europe uh for to to satisfy
    our climate Ambitions required to almost
    triple renewable energy install capacity
    and by 2030 and increase fivefold by
    2050 so we need a lot of equipment and
    we need a lot of critical materials that
    will be used to uh manufacture this
    equipment and we will need them on time
    and at the right price from a utilities
    point of view right so we are only one
    investment cycle away from 2030 which
    means that we definitely appreciate the
    lessons learned from the recent crisis
    and we definitely understand that there
    is a need to find a pathway forward that
    combines both climate targets and energy
    security and we are increasingly the
    utilities working closer with the
    industry
    um but at the same time our asking from
    policy makers is that in order for us to
    play our part we need to make sure that
    we have Supply chains in place the
    resiliency in place the equipment in
    place and I will say that again at the
    right price uh because unability has
    always been an issue when we talk about
    energ security when we talk about
    climate transition and from the
    utilities point of you as well we can’t
    just ignore
    it um the green industrial plan has
    being the response of Europe to the IRA
    uh I totally appreciate that it’s not a
    matter of competitiveness who can do it
    better uh but it’s a matter how you can
    join forces and make sure you deliver on
    time what we need um in order to meet
    our targets um but these These are the
    important aspects for for a utility to
    make sure that we have enough panels
    enough wi turbines enough batteries and
    of course this need to come together
    with the permitting framework it’s has
    been a huge issue uh in Europe
    permitting how you reduce red tape and
    you you keep deploying and of course
    great cables uh are extremely important
    um in order to make sure that
    electricity flows around the continent
    and that you Leverage The the resources
    that you have in the different parts of
    Europe and to make sure that you reduce
    over Reliance to anything as continent
    not at the country level so this this
    question is for the to the group because
    I’m
    honestly just
    curious um as we you know you think
    about this so supply chain concentration
    that really is you know it’s largely a
    China conversation um what are the
    components that we should be thinking
    about right like you know is it is it
    the is it the wind turbine is it
    batteries is it solar modules you know
    like what for each of you kind of what
    are the ones that what are the the
    essential pieces you think we need to
    kind of like focus on from a security
    perspective then we can talk about the
    other things you know sort of the the
    industrial policy the political economy
    of of transition just from a security
    like what which components do we need to
    be are you worried about C can I ask a
    clarifying question yes sir uh do you
    mean cyber security physical security
    supply chain I was aiming to be
    ambiguous on that just to
    like but like let’s like you know we
    talked a lot earlier today about cyber
    so we could like let’s start at Cyber
    and then you know physical I feel like
    we’ve kind of covered and then and then
    talking about sort of like where is
    there supply chain risk that might be
    familiar from the oil and gas space
    right where you’re worried like you know
    like in a in a rising geopolitical
    conflict like we’re just going to lose
    access to a critical component of the
    Energy
    System cyber then go go go Supply uh I’m
    going to speak to to one before cyber um
    but but I’ll start with something I
    think that is a huge uh something we’re
    facing here in the United States quite a
    bit is load growth um whether it’s from
    data centers that are uh that are coming
    to the United States or whether it’s
    from electric vehicles or
    electrification of appliances or any
    number of things that is bringing
    electricity usage up um we here in the
    United States have to have additional
    capacity we just can’t deal with no
    capacity to meet load or meet demand um
    and so you know that brings me back to
    transmission which I could talk to you
    all day about transmission but that’s
    not why I’m here uh create wires to
    connect disperate regions is incredibly
    important um on cyber security I think
    all of the components are at issue all
    of the components of energy
    infrastructure at this point is
    connected I’d say the more points of
    connection the more vectors for cyber
    interference you have so we really have
    to do be mindful about that I think my
    former employer nerk is doing a good job
    at the sort of bulk power system of of
    mandating cyber security standards but
    when you get behind the meter and even
    at the distribution level there really
    isn’t a whole lot of conversation being
    had there quite possibly because the
    information sharing isn’t really
    happening um but uh on supply chain I I
    i’ I’d say um yeah I’m gonna leave it
    there actually I’m gonna stop get off
    the so
    box others I mean is is it even a
    well-posed question maybe I’m like maybe
    the componentry question is less
    important than I think I think it’s a
    critical question and and um I’m going
    to go to Ukraine because I think I think
    Ukraine is going through the energy
    transition right now and and we’ve been
    partnering with them shoulder shoulder
    with Jeff Patt with our our great
    Partners in the government let’s look at
    what what’s happened in Ukraine first
    thing Ukraine needs in in an emergency
    situation is emergency power and so we
    make a product called an aerod
    derivative turbine imagine a jet engine
    connected to a generator on the back of
    a trailer bed that you can move truck
    trailer that you can move around
    strategically Powers about 100,000 homes
    connected to a natural gas line Ukraine
    could use all of these aerod turbines we
    can get them the problem is in an era of
    an energy transition climate change we
    have two challenges they’re extremely
    high demand because everyone in the
    world wants to have these ready to go um
    to solve droughts weather conditions all
    around the world and two they rely on
    jet engines which involves critical
    minerals so we have huge supply chain
    issues so what we’re trying to do with
    Ukraine is go to our customers and say
    we’re sorry we know you really need this
    but Ukraine needs it more how can we
    balance that supply chain in real time
    we’re managing this down day by day with
    these inventories so job number one is
    emergency power not as easy as it sounds
    and in Ukraine they’re literally running
    generators sometimes to keep keep the
    lights on um the second would be grid
    grid synchronization equipment how do
    you enable uh a grid that’s impacted by
    a weather event in Ukraine it’s because
    of you know targeting a bombing by
    Russia and things like that to connect
    with other parts of the grid again not
    sitting on shelves um very high demand
    and years of backlog the third category
    I’d say would be just regular
    Transformers Auto Transformers and how
    do you replace something we had an issue
    in North Carolina someone was going
    around shooting up Transformers with a
    gun who would have thought and and how
    do you have a strategic Supply ready to
    go so we could go further than that
    weather wind and other Technologies but
    if we look at Ukraine in the early days
    of this energy transition energy
    security issue that is those have been
    the demand drivers in the near term to
    keep the lights on yeah Elena do you
    have thought what I would like to add is
    that of course there is a need for
    everything I mean everything in terms of
    components and Technologies and there is
    then the special category of equipment
    that is available which is the Chinese
    panels they are available but then
    especially because of what happened with
    Russia you want to diversify so there
    there is an issue not because there is
    not enough equipment but because you
    want a diversification strategy that
    makes sure
    that you won’t go down the pathway of
    over Reliance and as you said at the
    beginning you’re switching one with
    another so it’s it’s on all end it’s not
    Pi one technology and Tackle this
    problem and one of the things I think is
    is an open question for a lot of us in
    the analytical community in in the
    private sector is kind of like what is
    you know how do we even think about
    overreliance in that case right like the
    the intuitions we have from sort of the
    the oil space are just probably not the
    right ones to use here and so one of the
    things we’re hoping to do in this over
    the next year and a half with this
    project is think they’re like how do we
    actually kind of measure resilience in a
    meaningful way right is it is it the
    ability to spin up manufacturing when
    there’s Supply challenges is a certain
    level of diversity and enough I think
    that’s going to be some of the key
    questions that we have to face um rer I
    want to I want to return to you because
    you know as as a manufacturer one of the
    you know my if I if I you know we kind
    of put my my libertarian analyst hat on
    for a moment I go well this is all going
    to be really expensive right and part of
    the part of the story here of globalized
    Supply chains is it makes things cheaper
    and that’s good for consumers and it’s
    good for the energy transition so how do
    you how should we think about the the
    government doing the right amount of
    effort to really bring down costs to
    make this an affordable transition and a
    secure one at the same time you hit on
    one of the key points and we you were
    asking about transatlantic factories and
    the US factories in Europe let me just
    point out this is not a transatlantic
    issue NE it’s also domestic issue
    everybody wants their the cell Factory
    everybody wants their blade Factory and
    one thing you know the biding
    Administration have to go is go state to
    state and say nope you get this and you
    get that and we’ve had to spread out the
    supply chain because it’s entirely
    economically efficient both for the
    inefficient for the private sector and
    the public sector right as as Andrew
    pointed out to to keep you know
    repeating all these Technologies and
    what we’d like to do
    is we don’t want to build something in
    the US and ship it to other parts of the
    world necessarily we want the whole
    world kind of invested not only in the
    opportunities from energy nothing’s more
    important than affordable sustainable
    reliable electricity but have the
    economic developments of that too the
    work chain development going to
    underserve communities and making sure
    that we’re inspiring you know people who
    otherwise don’t have access to a stem
    education to be inspired to become stem
    leaders so this increasingly and I’d
    like to say we’re doing it because we
    want to do it we we’re committed to
    doing this but i’ also like to say like
    I think increasingly we have to do it if
    we’re going to be a global company
    working with Global Partners they should
    expect this from us where do they fit in
    the supply chain they may not get that
    in the cell Factory but they could get a
    critical component that helps us you
    know do this very efficiently all around
    the world and the public sector has to
    help with like we have domestication
    contents domestic content requirements
    in the US on inflation reduction act
    fine but they’ve defined those in a way
    it’s not 100% domestic content you know
    making sure that we’re helping our
    partners grow their supply chain but
    they’re also cautious about China too so
    I think they’re finding that balance and
    we should continue to be very pragmatic
    in how we we find that balance going
    forward interesting you know Elena from
    the European perspective you know what
    do how do you think about that the the
    challenge or what what are European
    policy makers looking at like I know
    like Stam education is a big priority
    for you right um you know when you hear
    this kind of like we have this term here
    in the US it’s like industrial policy is
    like an everything bagel right it’s
    trying to deliver everything you know
    how are how are some of those challenges
    being um considered in the in the
    European context not challenges but like
    a lot of those factors there there are
    three uh components uh when it comes to
    any industrial I think uh when it comes
    to any industrial success so you need
    the scale said you need the global scale
    you need the Innovation and then you
    need the financial support in order to
    build something that is uh can can can
    deliver
    so these days um and with the you the
    European Union has said very clearly the
    the end Target and what’s the goal uh
    where we want to
    go when it comes to Technologies and how
    exactly the industrial activity will be
    supported I think it’s not that clear
    it’s a bit um there are so many
    technological options there is a certain
    amount of money that can support these
    Technologies and it’s not infinite uh
    definitely a number there uh that cannot
    make
    everything competitive and successful
    and at the right amount and at the right
    price made in Europe and I think that’s
    where these discussions that are
    increasing over time uh with the us
    about the IRA and how we bring these two
    Frameworks together and we leverage the
    best out of it right um we are as you
    know right before the European election
    so we will have a new commission the
    item on the agenda are very clear with
    the industrial act the critical minerals
    act how GS will be supported and how we
    deliver the 20 30 and 40 targets uh but
    I think that the it’s it’s still out
    there uh the journey on how we are going
    to work together and how exactly we are
    going to get the supply chains and the
    equipment that we need Andrew I see you
    nodding and I’d love to hear your
    thoughts on this kind of same same
    question yeah of course the question you
    asked was what is the right amount of
    government effort needed and um one of
    the it reminds me one of the things we
    worked on when I was at doe uh was
    Transformers if you’re tracking domestic
    uh manufacturing domestic Supply chains
    you know that Transformers is a critical
    issue whether you’re talking about
    distribution Transformers which was
    actually a very acute issue here
    domestically they’re talking about what
    we call lpts or large power Transformers
    that are made for the transmission
    Network um there was a huge discussion
    about creating a strategic reserve for
    Transformers and it’s probably still an
    active conversation if I had to get yes
    uh the hill asked about it and you know
    the administration asked about it and
    the industry asked about it some but
    everybody kind of agreed that because
    our system in the United States is so
    big different specifications between the
    the Western interconnect and the Eastern
    interconnect very slight difference in
    frequency there just really wasn’t the
    ability to have a a supply chain or a
    reserve that served everybody’s needs so
    you’re talking hundreds of millions of
    dollars to maybe NE meet some Niche Gap
    uh when it’s needed and I think the
    Administration has done a good job of
    sort of putting forward a a a strategy
    that I think is the right strategy which
    is to onshore this stuff and for inure
    this stuff so we don’t have to have a
    strategic Transformer Reserve so we have
    it in our backyards um the IRA
    incentives they are they’re fantastic it
    allows more more capacity uh for us to
    manufacture Goods domestically and work
    with our partners I’d also note that
    it’s not just limited to the United
    States I mentioned this earlier in a
    conversation but um because of the IRA
    companies like in energy a private
    company have been able to invest abroad
    as well we have two offices in Madrid
    we’ve got projects in Japan Poland UK uh
    Uruguay uh Brazil Mexico Canada we’re
    able to do that because of the success
    we’ve had domestically and i’ I’d argue
    that in some respects it’s because of
    Investments made even by the r Ira um
    that I also agree with uh Roger about
    the balance between decoupling from
    China and and pushing forward our
    manufacturing um efforts here
    domestically there has to be a balance
    it can’t be just a throw everything out
    um China has developed a a manufacturing
    um capacity that nobody else in the
    world has we’ve kind of seated that
    leadership a long time ago and now it’s
    time to bring that back to our Shores in
    the United States and of course uh the
    shores of all of you um represented here
    in the room um thank you so much I’m GNA
    ask one final question to the panel but
    I want to bring the the audience in so
    give it give it a thought of what you
    want to get out of these folks and and
    we’ll turn to you in a moment but you
    know a lot of what we are trying to help
    states do and is like a risk management
    problem right sort of how do we assess
    these supply chain risks how do we
    incorporate them how do we kind of bring
    in the Cyber and physical risks that we
    spent a lot of time today talking about
    risk management also gives us the
    ability to try and hedge right and so
    when I think about this challenge I
    think well you know it’s just as Andrew
    says how do we how do you compete on
    solar manufacturing with China it’s like
    that might be hard expensive to do but
    as Roger brings in there’s a whole bunch
    of other technologies that we know we
    need for deep decarbonization that are
    going to be part of the Future Energy
    System that nobody really has ownership
    of yet so how do we look at this risk
    management problem also as an
    opportunity to kind of see investment
    flow to places where we we know we need
    to see further technological development
    and you know how do you Roger how how’s
    GE thinking about that how do you think
    about it and how can we help the the US
    and European governments think about um
    that that sort of you know kind of
    hedging strategies for this for these
    risks it’s something that weighs on me
    every day and so thank you for asking
    and look if we were sit here today and
    if we could lock in the policy framework
    so the direction the momentum is
    happening I think we’d feel quite
    optimistic that you know maybe we’re not
    100% there we got some guidances coming
    out the bid Administration the EU has
    some work to do but seems like things
    are heading the right direction but we
    all know that nothing is a straight line
    and companies do best on this type of
    investment when there’s certainty and so
    from a risk perspective we see a lot of
    uncertainty board sees a lot of
    uncertainty we see uncertainty and so
    we’re managing for the uncertainty we’re
    hedging for the uncertainty and we see
    that the trends are moving in the right
    direction the energy security uh
    innovation technology manufacturing jobs
    regardless of you know what you might
    think on politics everyone should be
    behind all those Concepts but then there
    becomes the question how you execute on
    that so we’re constantly looking to
    encourage our government stakeholders on
    all sides of the issues if you care
    about energy security if you care about
    jobs manufacturing beating China
    innovation technology you should care
    about sending clear signals of certainty
    to the business environment and the
    other thing you could do is think about
    some of the the roadblocks and the
    obstacles whether permitting reform some
    of the finance issues how do you
    streamline Workforce Development the
    things in the way you know I I was
    impressed with a lot of things that at
    cop 28 in the UAE and one of the things
    I walked away with someone who’s been in
    the space for 30 years is just like how
    much easier it is to get things done in
    certain parts of the world like we know
    it’s not easy here it’s not easy in
    Europe but there’s places where it’s
    just really easy and maybe that’s good
    for some things you want them to pilot
    projects and that’s fine and we can do
    that in a collaborative way but at some
    point that’s just going to attract a lot
    of inevitable investment in attention if
    you can do something in three months whe
    it would take two years or three years
    and litigation uncertainty here so I
    think we have to solve for for those
    risks at the same time so as an example
    of that kind of certainty like the the
    global pledge to build you know triple
    nuclear capacity and you know which is a
    place where there’s potentially a lot of
    innovation it doesn’t feel like anybody
    really owns that space at the moment
    especially in the smrs where Andrew
    talked about hydrogen hubs and carbon
    capture hubs like those are great we
    love where Doe’s headed with that we
    love where Congress has headed with that
    but now is EPA going to issue the
    permits fast enough there there going to
    be litigation around those things and
    versus other places where they might be
    like we’re doing a hydrogen Hub so so
    here’s our schedule we’re sticking to it
    so we have to be careful about you know
    the the relative advantages of those typ
    typ of situations and Elena and what are
    your thoughts on this kind of like you
    know the sort of the the big innovation
    problems associated with a net zero
    economy and you know how do you you know
    where do you see European efforts since
    so much of the US conversation is now on
    hydrogen and carbon capture and small
    modular
    reactors definitely there is a lot of
    focus on what we like to call the phase
    two of De decarbonization Technologies
    where things are not settled so um
    hydrogen has been been a focus for for
    Europe the last few years for PBC as
    well green hydrogen the electrolysis I
    mean there is a lot of plans for ramping
    up capacity uh for manufacturing
    electrolyzers in Europe um and there are
    special schemes where they allow us to
    test things at a smaller scale um there
    are these projects of common interest we
    have in Europe with quite a few projects
    uh around Hydro and especially address
    to the heart toate sector so Maritime is
    hungry about what they’re going to do uh
    industrial players a lot so there is
    definitely room there and the Frameworks
    are setting up I just think from utility
    point of view of course we are trying
    smaller things smaller projects
    decentralized projects something that
    it’s not going at the core of the system
    but we test things on the side and we
    can see how we can this can be roll roll
    out while the market is set up because
    the challenge there is a to set up the
    market and B to come up uh to make sure
    that we have the the equipment and is
    working and there is permitting and that
    everything around is is set so we are
    trying uh pilot projects around Europe
    there is a lot of hype around hydrogen I
    think this might be scaled down a bit um
    next year or so because it’s not just
    the economics are hard but it’s also
    that it’s it’s very expensive and it’s
    very difficult technically to transfer
    molecules compared to electrons but I
    think that definitely this there is a
    lot of room for trial and error and
    there is time there that will allow all
    of the different sectors to line up and
    deliver and there is a great opportunity
    in terms of of equipment but I don’t
    want to get there this is not not really
    my area well I’m I’m really feel that
    you like one one of the terms that you
    use there is right trial and error and
    learning and um I was just I’m reading
    the book fixing the climate again with
    my students that Charlie Sable and David
    Victor wrote this like really impactful
    book at least for me um on kind of how
    climate policy actually works and one of
    the key themes is like learning right
    experimentalism ends up being very very
    important in in helping firms and
    countries make these kind of like
    existential choices about what their
    energy portfolio is going to look like
    what their business is going to look
    like in the face of needing to build a
    net zero World needing to improve energy
    security um and that you know it becomes
    a key and important part of industrial
    industrial policy um it does and you
    know if there is an advantage that we
    have in Europe is that we have a lot of
    countries with different Energy Mix and
    with different Pathways to get to to
    nzero which allows us to try some things
    around I mean you have France of course
    that has nuclear uh you have the South
    that has a lot of solar so there are
    different Microsystems if if you wish
    that they can try different things and
    see at the end of the day what are the
    solutions that could work and could fly
    and what are the ones that who didn’t
    yeah that’s excellent I’m really looking
    forward to continuing work on that space
    and then of course we collect all those
    different microcosms with a large grid
    and a lot of grid infrastructure and
    then we can share efficiency and
    resilience um let me open to the floor
    uh as folks have questions on this
    regard um there should be a microphone
    going around um brief reminder questions
    have a propositional statement followed
    by sense goes up again uh on the subject
    of cyber security uh most of the uh
    discussion today most all of it probably
    seemed to assume that that the
    vulnerability was coming from hostile
    governments uh how would you compare and
    contrast that qualitatively and
    quantitatively with the vulnerability to
    non-governmental actors whether
    it’s hostile private group operating
    abroad or a bunch of kids amusing
    themselves uh
    whatever trying to speak high level
    enough that I’m not sharing anything I
    probably shouldn’t share um I’d say it’s
    I’d say it’s a good point and I’d say
    certainly leans towards State actors but
    you’re right there is a real threat even
    from nonstate connected
    actors can I just address that yeah
    please please I think it’s a critical
    point because the technology should be
    agnostic on that right and we have to
    make sure we have both digital and
    physical
    tools exactly yeah yes
    yeah thank you Bob iert Atlanta Council
    um I’d like to to get your perspective
    on wind from a sort of a supplier
    investor utility perspective because
    we’ve had this downward curve and then
    all of a sudden we got hit with Supply
    chains disruption inflation higher
    financing cost Etc and it’s really
    affected the offshore wind in particular
    not only in Europe and the us but around
    the world as well so I
    mean is it going to
    change and
    why it’s an excellent question tough
    days or I mean I in preparing for the
    for this conference I read that wind
    surpassed uh gas for the first time
    across Europe as a as a primary energy
    source so challenges in the
    industry onshore wind I think has found
    its footing good trajectory there
    inflation reduction act partially
    responsible for that and but even
    without the inflation reduction act
    we’re seeing the right Market signals to
    give onshore win long-term sustainab
    bilon support you’re right about
    offshore that’s probably been the
    hardest thing that we do I think history
    if I had to make a prediction we’ll look
    at
    2023 and say that was the toughest year
    that was the year the whole industry had
    to reset the market had to reset every
    everybody’s expectations had to reset
    we’re only in April of 2024 but I’d like
    to think history is going to look back
    and say April 20 2024 was the year
    turned around um the market the oems the
    governments came together they learned
    from that and we start to see a forward
    trajectory so still hard very hard
    perhaps the hardest thing we’re doing
    but I see the positive momentum and
    that’s been a result of both government
    the public sector and the private sector
    having to make some really difficult
    decisions in the last 18 months or so
    financing rates are barrier now or we’re
    starting to see the pricing start to get
    closer we’re getting in the universe now
    where where the pricing is making better
    sense for for offshore wind so we’ like
    the trajectory where that’s headed Elena
    I’d love to hear your thoughts on that
    question too given that Greece has this
    enormous offshore wind
    resource um beautiful views kind of like
    I what are the you know what what are
    the what are your thoughts on that we
    think that it’s a technology still in
    its early days the offshore wind
    um especially in Greece the potential
    can be leveraged using floating offshore
    wind because we have very deep water and
    we understand that this is even in the
    earliest days and it’s going to be more
    expensive we we understand that and it’s
    going to be need support like uh the
    same thing happened with all with the
    solar and the onore wind back uh like 10
    or 15 years ago however uh in Europe we
    also have the UTS scheme the carbon
    price so we can’t say that the
    competitiveness is that close to be
    honest I think that the crossover points
    are closer than than here uh the gas
    prices that we experience are also
    higher not as low here um but definitely
    going back to my point about scale and
    what it takes for a technology you know
    to get there and become competitive we
    will need the scale from the the
    manufacturer’s point of view but also
    offer wind is a technology that will
    need support in order uh to become
    competitive and out comp heat thermal uh
    on its own Merit without any any
    subsidies and it’s not just that that
    offshore wind also needs the grid
    infrastructure so going back to my point
    about the importance of En hassing grid
    modernizing grids and making sure that
    we have the infrastructure to leverage
    its full potential it’s it’s critical so
    it’s not just the equipment it’s also
    everything else that comes around it
    please Andrew go ahead yeah I on onshore
    uh Roger is exactly right I totally
    agree with him if you read the American
    clean Power Association reports and any
    eia reports you saw a huge dip in 2023
    of onshore wind deployment and it was
    precisely because covid inflation rates
    supply chain uh I think you’re on your
    trajectory up we have this price signal
    now with the inflation reduction act for
    10 years we have a solid we can rely on
    that tax credit for a long time to come
    which we’ve never had before as industry
    on offshore uh inventery owns an
    offshore wind uh lease in both
    California and in New York so we’re
    dealing with both floating and more
    offshore wind and can kind of you know
    see the both perspectives I think
    generally as an industry offshore is
    going to take a long time to get right
    but I do think you’re starting to see it
    level out and balance out a little bit
    where a lot of the contracts that were
    made for offshore wind facilities that
    are becoming a thing now were made at a
    time when the world looked a lot
    different than it does today um I think
    some of the ones including in Energy’s
    uh um agreement with uh New Jersey BPU
    um you know are at a place where we can
    start really thinking about putting
    steel in the water now it’s a matter of
    permitting transmission and VG is
    developing a transmission line to take
    all the offshore wind from the east
    coast and put it in the pjm um
    permitting sighting uh and all the other
    things that are going to go along with
    uh creating the
    industry uh yeah we can go over here and
    while while the microphone’s in transit
    I’ll you know I like that comment from
    Elena you know ETS does work you know
    Carbon pricing some challenging days
    here in the States but it really does
    make a difference provides Market
    certainty for our innovators go ahead hi
    um thank you for everything
    UMAS previously CS now at HG uh
    centering on the definition of energy
    security um and thinking of all the
    geopolitical conflicts that we’re having
    in the world like we have a global nor
    and Global South and of course the
    definition of energy Security is
    contigent to every country but when
    thinking about defining the energy
    security of every country or different
    regions around the world how do we
    differentiate it is it developed to non
    developed is it the global South to not
    the global South um yeah how do you
    think about the definition of each
    country thank
    youbody write have experience of like
    energy security issues I mean IIA I
    think has this definition that says it’s
    all about availability affordability
    access and accessibility so you need to
    access to have access to energy resource
    at all times at a at a low
    price as we are transitioning to a
    different world and everyone is
    transitioning to a different world right
    solar is cheap for everyone you can see
    uh in the developing countries a lot of
    innovation happening lip frogging and
    moving to a certain
    direction there is this like 3 a are
    replaced by decentralization you know
    digitalization uh
    decarbonization so and this comes with
    its own like risks and its own
    vulnerabilities but also with different
    opportunities and because the
    Technologies are Global um different
    countries can enjoy the benefits of the
    same technologies that are uh yeah of
    the same technology so I would say that
    the definition is the same for everyone
    in in my opinion how you use the
    technology available and how you make
    your systems might D might differ but
    the definition I wouldn’t say the
    different countries would have a
    different definition of energy security
    yeah if I may add I think one of the
    things that often gets conflated is
    energy security and sort of
    geopolitical factors right that you
    could be very energy secure but totally
    geopolitically beholden and and you
    could be and and so part of what I think
    governments are trying to do is navigate
    both of those things right that um you
    don’t want to sa you don’t want to
    sacrifice one for the other necessarily
    that’s true but there is a confusion
    sometimes I think that energy secure
    means energy independ dependent right
    which is is not the case uh you need to
    have enough diversity H and make sure
    that you have access at all time not
    that you need to rely on your own
    resources right yeah um let’s take one
    final question and then I think we can
    wrap up the day um yep here we
    go
    thanks um question is about stockpiling
    and what role you see for stockpiling in
    future Energies security you know the Ia
    at the moment with 90 days uh
    requirement for oil to what extent can
    that be carried over and perhaps
    particularly for Supply chains where
    China is already dominant and solar is
    the one that stands out for me where it
    might make less sense for on shuring or
    friend Shoring and what role would you
    see for stock piling
    thanks um I’m going to respond to two
    different answers one um when I was at
    doe our office was in charge of the the
    Strategic petroleum Reserve I think
    there’s a different answer for your
    question if you’re talking about fuel
    supply it just doesn’t really it’s
    comparing Fuel and Technology I think is
    a little unfair comparison so no
    position on stockpiling uh fuel in
    Europe or or wherever because I help Le
    the the stockpile here in the United
    States for that um the Chinese Supply
    the Chinese suppliers of products and
    sort of diversifying the the uh
    technological supply chain
    I I’m only going to speak to my
    experience At Doe when we had the tech
    the Transformer Reserve idea um that was
    specific to the circumstances of
    Transformer Reserve they’re just those
    pieces of infrastructure are incredibly
    expensive and they go out they’re
    outdated pretty quickly depending on the
    use case um but I won’t opine on other
    Technologies to stockpiling I I do think
    it’s a it’s a good question to continue
    to ask but I don’t know that we as a
    country at least for my vantage point
    have have had a conversation about
    pieces other than sort of L uh large
    power any thoughts to add on that
    question I think it’s well said
    okay well I’m let me uh now we’re I’m
    gon to make them wait while I close out
    the whole conference so they have to sit
    here for 10 minutes now um on on behalf
    of everybody at csis let me thank our
    guests who’ve been here in person uh our
    colleagues from joining online we’re
    really grateful that you lended your
    time um my colleague Max Bergman uh on
    on his behalf as well uh I think we
    we’re really appreciative that
    everybody’s engaged in this conversation
    with us we’re appreciative that that PPC
    is in a position to help support this
    work and uh we are very very mostly
    grateful for the efforts of our of our
    experts they took time out of our day to
    share their perspectives with us thank
    you very much if if you wouldn’t mind we
    can close with a warm Round of Applause
    for our
    speakers and uh this is Joseph mik for
    csia signing off we’ll see you next time
    [Music]

    Join the CSIS Energy Security and Climate Change program and the Europe, Russia, and Eurasia Program on Tuesday, April 23, 2024, at CSIS HQ, for the 2024 Energy Security and Geopolitics Conference. This year’s conference will feature a keynote from The Honorable Geoffrey R. Pyatt, Assistant Secretary of State for Energy Resources and Mr. Georgios Stassis, Chairman and CEO of the Public Power Corporation S.A. The conference will begin at 10:45 AM and conclude at 4:30 PM EST.

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