How a fast transition to renewables could save (not cost) $15 trillion
New analysis from researchers at Oxford University inverts the traditional logic of the renewables debate: Rather than purely calculating the costs of the transition, the researchers at Oxford modeled out the expected savings of wind, solar, and battery deployments through a probabilistic framework. “The best we can do is make good bets,” the authors wrote this week in the science publication Joule. “Which technologies should we bet on—and how likely are they to pay off?”
To cut to the chase, the authors conclude the payoff of a clean energy transition is profound—on the order of $5 to $15 trillion in net savings, according to the report. “Moreover,” the authors conclude, “it is also a safe bet, with around an 80% probability that it will be cheaper than continuing with a fossil fuel-based system (and 82% when compared with a slower transition).”
I emailed this week with Kingsmill Bond, a senior principal at the Rocky Mountain Institute, who writes of the report: “If you can get past the somewhat uninspiring title, it has important work in it… Most analysis on the future of energy thinks in linear terms… This paper however goes to the issue at the heart of the energy transition – the rapid fall in the costs of new energy technologies on learning curves.”
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Giving thanks for Wall Street’s short-term mindset
This week, we distributed a recent Q&A with our firm’s founder and CIO, Arne Alsin. For those who may have missed it, I wanted to share the link again. Arne talks about a range of subjects—his views on Tesla, Buffett’s idea of waiting for the fat pitch, portfolio management theory—but perhaps my favorite part of the conversation was his discussion of the short-termism that plagues much of Wall Street. On the surface, long-term investors often gripe about this subject, but Arne flips it. “As much as I hate the shallow analysis,” he says, “I love that it gives us opportunities.”
A few more links I enjoyed:
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