Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    tomder55's Avatar
    tomder55 Posts: 1,742, Reputation: 346
    Ultra Member
     
    #41

    Jan 10, 2026, 05:07 AM
    Energy Sec Chris Wright on the green new steal


    "One of the things you never hear about is total primary energy consumption in the United States is now over 72% comes from two energy sources, oil and natural gas, record high market share, in addition to volumes. It doesn't quite sound like the dying industry I've been hearing about for the last 15 years. But if you roll over to the electricity sector, it's a very different story.

    In the oil and gas production segment, declining capital intensity, increasing efficiency, surging production. What's happening in the electricity sector? Surging investments, gigantic amount of monies are flowing in.

    And what's been the net result of that? Almost no growth at all in the production of electricity, but significant growth in the price of electricity. If you make electricity more expensive and people don't know where that policy is going to go, guess what?

    Energy intensive industry leaves your country. The United Kingdom and Germany are experts at that. And they can tell you.

    In Germany, they've invested a half a trillion dollars, more than doubled the capacity of their electricity grid, and they produce 20% less electricity than they did before the half trillion dollar investment. And they sell it at three times the price. Like that is not a winning model.

    That is not what the world is going to duplicate. We have just gotten so far off track. Think of our industry, smart, detailed analyzing, physics, numbers, math.

    But when it comes to climate change, we just check rationality at the door. Forget it. That doesn't apply over here. It's only about decarbonizing and claiming we're in the middle of an energy transition. That's just, I think we are in the midst of the greatest malinvestment in human history. Ten trillion dollars on a global base has been invested nominally in fighting climate change.

    What do you get for ten trillion dollars? Well, to be very specific on energy sources, we got solar up to 1.2% of global energy, and wind at 1.4%. Collectively, 2.6% of global energy comes from these sources that ten trillion dollars of investment has gone into, and everywhere the penetration level is high, prices have gone up, and you've, as I said, de-industrialized Germany, the United Kingdom, California, and you just move industry. That doesn't reduce emissions.

    If you make it so that the factory closes in the Midlands of England, and it moves to Asia, and it runs on coal now instead of natural gas, and you load the goods on diesel ships, that's not fighting climate change. That's de-industrializing your nation and having a government pounding the drum on decarbonization, but never doing the math on is it working. A couple other data points.

    85% of global energy came from hydrocarbons at the time of the Yom Kippur War. Woke the world up. Oh my God, oil prices tripled.

    They rose again later that decade. We got to change our energy system. That's when the energy transition movement started over 50 years ago. 85% from hydrocarbons, today, 85% hydrocarbons. Let's just engage with reality. Oil, gas, and coal are what run the world. Full stop. We can't make a wind turbine, or a solar pan, or a nuclear power plant without massive amounts of oil, gas, and coal. That's how the world works."



    Goldman Sachs MD Neil Mehta speaks to Energy Sec. Chris Wright at energy conference — 1/7/2026

    complete transcript here .

    Chris Wright Addresses Venezuela, Climate Alarmism, And America Doing Big Things Again

    Energy Sec Chris Wright on the green new steal


    "One of the things you never hear about is total primary energy consumption in the United States is now over 72% comes from two energy sources, oil and natural gas, record high market share, in addition to volumes. It doesn't quite sound like the dying industry I've been hearing about for the last 15 years. But if you roll over to the electricity sector, it's a very different story.

    In the oil and gas production segment, declining capital intensity, increasing efficiency, surging production. What's happening in the electricity sector? Surging investments, gigantic amount of monies are flowing in.

    And what's been the net result of that? Almost no growth at all in the production of electricity, but significant growth in the price of electricity. If you make electricity more expensive and people don't know where that policy is going to go, guess what?

    Energy intensive industry leaves your country. The United Kingdom and Germany are experts at that. And they can tell you.

    In Germany, they've invested a half a trillion dollars, more than doubled the capacity of their electricity grid, and they produce 20% less electricity than they did before the half trillion dollar investment. And they sell it at three times the price. Like that is not a winning model.

    That is not what the world is going to duplicate. We have just gotten so far off track. Think of our industry, smart, detailed analyzing, physics, numbers, math.

    But when it comes to climate change, we just check rationality at the door. Forget it. That doesn't apply over here. It's only about decarbonizing and claiming we're in the middle of an energy transition. That's just, I think we are in the midst of the greatest malinvestment in human history. Ten trillion dollars on a global base has been invested nominally in fighting climate change.

    What do you get for ten trillion dollars? Well, to be very specific on energy sources, we got solar up to 1.2% of global energy, and wind at 1.4%. Collectively, 2.6% of global energy comes from these sources that ten trillion dollars of investment has gone into, and everywhere the penetration level is high, prices have gone up, and you've, as I said, de-industrialized Germany, the United Kingdom, California, and you just move industry. That doesn't reduce emissions.

    If you make it so that the factory closes in the Midlands of England, and it moves to Asia, and it runs on coal now instead of natural gas, and you load the goods on diesel ships, that's not fighting climate change. That's de-industrializing your nation and having a government pounding the drum on decarbonization, but never doing the math on is it working. A couple other data points.

    85% of global energy came from hydrocarbons at the time of the Yom Kippur War. Woke the world up. Oh my God, oil prices tripled.

    They rose again later that decade. We got to change our energy system. That's when the energy transition movement started over 50 years ago. 85% from hydrocarbons, today, 85% hydrocarbons. Let's just engage with reality. Oil, gas, and coal are what run the world. Full stop. We can't make a wind turbine, or a solar pan, or a nuclear power plant without massive amounts of oil, gas, and coal. That's how the world works."



    Goldman Sachs MD Neil Mehta speaks to Energy Sec. Chris Wright at energy conference — 1/7/2026

    complete transcript here .

    Chris Wright Addresses Venezuela, Climate Alarmism, And America Doing Big Things Again

Not your question? Ask your question View similar questions

 

Question Tools Search this Question
Search this Question:

Advanced Search

Add your answer here.


Check out some similar questions!

What's a good face cream that will lighten up scar on my face? [ 0 Answers ]

I am looking for something not too expensive and works , I can buy in drug store please

I can't figure out my face shape and I want to get my hair cut to suit my face [ 5 Answers ]

The measurements of my face are: Widest part of cheekbones (cheekbone to cheekbone) - 9 inches Widest part of jaw (widest part on the left to widest part on the right) - 8 inches Widest part of forehead (" ") - 8 inches Length of face - 7 inches It says my face shape is square but it...

Should I get on a plane and find out what happened face to face? [ 3 Answers ]

Hi Everyone, I was in a relationship with a girl I met through World of Warcraft(pc game) for about three years until the 4/11/09 when I she ended it, over msn. She is Norwegian, I'm English. She was 16 when I met her and I was 17. I'm now 21 and she is 19. We've spent a lot of time together....


View more questions Search