Power Plays
Recorded 21st June. Lucy joins from a sweltering London, while Charlotte records from Lake Tahoe after racing the Broken Arrow Skyrace with The North Face team. We cover three stories spanning UK energy politics, FERC 2222, and rare-earth supply chains: 1. Andy Burnham, Labour and the Future of UK Energy Policy Lucy looks at Andy Burnham’s election to Parliament in Makerfield and what it could mean for the future direction of Labour’s energy and infrastructure agenda. The discussion covers: * why Burnham’s victory is being viewed as more than a routine by-election * what a more devolved approach to energy policy could mean * the debate around public ownership, public control and essential infrastructure * whether nationalisation would reduce energy bills, or whether market design is the bigger issue * how locational pricing and planning reform could affect where clean energy gets built * the trade-off between local decision-making and a national energy strategy * why affordability may become more politically important than net-zero targets 2. FERC 2222, Data Centres and Virtual Power Plants Charlotte turns to the US, where FERC has ordered six major grid operators to explain whether data-centre interconnection costs are being shifted onto existing electricity customers. The discussion covers: * how FERC Order 2222 opened wholesale electricity markets to aggregated DERs, including batteries, EVs, rooftop solar and flexible loads * why the debate has intensified as hyperscale AI campuses seek hundreds of megawatts to gigawatts of new power demand * why capacity is becoming one of the most valuable resources in the electricity system * how 10,000 residential batteries can form a virtual power plant, while 100,000 batteries could provide roughly 1–1.5 GW of dispatchable capacity * how VPPs can unlock value from existing infrastructure rather than waiting years for new transmission and substations * why capacity payments, demand response and ancillary services are creating new revenue streams for distributed assets * how community batteries and resilience hubs could provide backup power during outages while supporting grid reliability 3. Phoenix Tailings and Rare-Earth Supply Chains Charlotte discusses Phoenix Tailings, the US rare-earth processing company that secured $500 million of financing from the Pentagon’s Office of Strategic Capital. The discussion covers: * how rare-earth magnets underpin EVs, wind turbines, robotics, defence systems, data centres and industrial automation * why China’s dominance of refining and magnet production has become a strategic concern * the difference between mining rare earths and processing them into usable oxides, metals and magnets * how Phoenix Tailings uses mine tailings, industrial waste streams and secondary feedstocks * why rare-earth separation is one of the most technically challenging parts of the supply chain * how advanced separation chemistry and electrochemical processing could reduce waste, emissions and reagent use * the key scale-up challenges around yield, recovery, reliability, offtake and commercial execution Across the episode, the common theme is infrastructure: who pays for it, who controls it, and how governments, markets and technology shape the systems needed for the energy transition.
18 episodes
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