Webinar with François-Xavier Chevallerau hosted by Nate Hagens & Joan Diamond
The paper was commissioned by the Crans Foresight Analysis Consensus (FAN) with funding from Omega Resources for Resilience.
Based on the newly released paper, The Age of Energy Disruptions by François-Xavier Chevallerau, the briefing by the author will encourage conversation on this topic which has perplexed so many; the paper transforms what seem to be unconnected events and often feels like whack-a-mole, into a coherent narrative.
In recent months the world has been thrown into a global energy crisis that has taken most observers and global leaders by surprise. Suddenly, gas and electricity prices went through the roof in Europe, China and then India experienced widespread coal shortages and large-scale power blackouts, and fuel prices rapidly spiked across the world.
This sudden “energy shock”, as The Economist titled, is bringing back memories of the 1970s. Yet what we are facing today is unlikely to be a repeat of what happened 50 years ago.
The world is a very different place now than what it was back then, the causes of our energy crisis are different as well, and so are likely to be its consequences.The competing narratives that currently dominate the conversation about our energy situation however largely fail to account for these causes and consequences. Unable to grasp all the dimensions and the complexity of the crisis, they are blind to the reality of our energy past, present and future.
We have entered the age of global energy disruptions, and the “energy transition” that we are inevitably headed for is unlikely to be the one we expect.
Francois-Xavier Chevallerau is the founder-director of The Biophysical Economics Policy Center, BiophysEco, headquartered in Brussels, Belgium.
At Sciences Po (France), his academic work focused on politics, international relations and EU studies. He was the EU Government Manager for the LNE Group and served as the business development manager at the United Nations (New York City) for PwC Luxembourg. As a consultant to EU institutions (also for PwC), he provided policy advice (policy research and analysis, impact assessment and evaluation) an d business consulting services, including innovation management.