Decarbonize Weekly
📺 Decarbonize Deep Dive 009 | ~22 min DEEP DIVE: The Largest Oil Shock in History — and the First With a Real Off-Ramp The Strait of Hormuz has been closed since 28 February 2026. Eleven weeks in, the IEA calls it the largest oil supply disruption in the history of the global oil market — more than 10 million barrels a day removed, roughly twice the size of the 1973 and 1979 shocks. Brent peaked near $126 in April and sits around $100 in mid-May, up about 58% year-to-date. Most coverage asks one question: how high do prices go? Decarbonize Weekly asks the one that matters more — does an oil shock this size accelerate the energy transition, or stall it? History says oil shocks accelerate structural change. What makes 2026 different is that, for the first time, the alternatives — EVs, heat pumps, grid storage, electrified freight, sustainable fuels — are mature enough to absorb the demand a shock displaces. But maturity is not destiny: the same shock that pulls demand toward electricity also raises the cost of the capital needed to build the electric supply. Which force wins is a policy choice, not a market outcome. Key topics: • The 1970s template — how the 1973 and 1979 shocks reshaped energy policy, and why the structural responses (efficiency standards, building codes, the strategic petroleum reserve) outlasted the price spike by decades • Demand destruction vs. demand substitution — why 2026 is the first oil shock where switching fuels, not just using less, is a large and available channel • The accelerant in the data — European BEV sales +29.4% in Q1 2026, EVs roughly 1 in 4 new cars sold globally, solar leading global energy demand growth for the first time • The other half of the story — why the same shock starves the transition of capital: higher-for-longer interest rates, fossil supply as the highest-return trade, and the affordability ceiling on transition politics • The tie-breaker — why locking in demand-side structural change while the price signal is doing the persuading is what made 1973 matter for decades • The aviation exception — SAF at 0.8% of jet fuel, no European e-SAF project at final investment decision, and why the shock makes the gap more visible without making it smaller • The transatlantic split — a tightening EU with the machinery to convert a price signal into policy vs. a deregulating US relying on the price signal alone • The realistic 2026 outlook — base, upside and downside cases, and the four signals that will tell you which one is unfolding The technology question is settled. Whether 2026 becomes the transition's inflection point or a missed decade turns entirely on capital allocation — and that is a choice being made right now. --- 🔗 Website: decarbonizeweekly.com 📧 Contact: hello@decarbonizeweekly.com 🎧 Also on Spotify: search 'Decarbonize Weekly' #OilShock #EnergyTransition #StraitOfHormuz #OilCrisis #BrentCrude #Electrification #EVs #SAF #EnergySecurity #1973OilCrisis #RenewableEnergy #CleanEnergy #Decarbonization #EnergyPolicy #ClimateTech #DecarbonizeWeekly
14 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de Decarbonize Weekly!