Silver linings and silver bullets
The temporary destruction of energy demand may mean Covid-19 is the turning point for the energy transition
The pandemic of 2020 is an undeniable tragedy. Economies have been disrupted and lives impacted in ways that none of us ever imagined. But, while Covid-19 cases have grown in Europe and the US with the onset of winter, the news of successful vaccine trials has given people and markets new hope of a return to normal. When we talk about greenhouse gas emissions and climate change, though, normal is the furthest place we could imagine from where we want to be. CO₂ emissions fell 8.8pc in the first half of 2020. That is not difficult to understand. Businesses closed, people largely stayed at home and global air travel ground to a near-halt. The World Bank estimates that, when all is said and do

Also in this section
4 April 2025
Crucial talks at the IMO focus on a two-tier emissions trading scheme combined with a marine fuel standard
28 March 2025
The massive expansion of the Northern Lights project in Norway is the clearest sign yet that the European oil and gas companies mean business when it comes to CCS
27 March 2025
Awards celebrate global innovation, leadership and achievement across the energy sector’s people, projects, technologies and companies.
20 March 2025
While advanced economies debate peak fossil fuel demand, billions of people still lack access to reliable and affordable energy, especially in the Global South