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01 | Electric World Order | The Quiet Revolution 25 Mar 202600:30:39

The second wave of the energy transition is already happening: Since 2022, developing countries have been rapidly ramping up their use of solar panels, batteries and electric vehicles. And the subsequent energy crisis of 2026 makes cleaner, electrified energy even more compelling. This episode explores how a surge of affordable, high quality clean tech is rewiring global energy; and why China is making all of this happen.

Guests: 

  • Haneea Isaad (Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, Pakistan) 
  • Kyle Chan (Fellow at the John L. Thornton Center for China Studies, Brookings Institution; author of the newsletter, “High Capacity”)

Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate MacKenzie, and Tim Sahay from the net zero industrial policy lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com




Introducing: Electric World Order | The geopolitics of the energy and technology transition13 Mar 202600:02:48

This first season of The Polycrisis podcast tells the story of the clash between new and old energy regimes.


Just like other energy transitions before it, this is a geopolitical story - not a climate one. Developing countries are leapfrogging their wealthy counterparts by rapidly deploying cheap solar panels, batteries and electric vehicles imported from China. This gives them a low-cost supply that’s immune to wars and other disruptions. 


This energy transition is deeply connected to shifts taking place in the world, especially since the US-Israel attacks on Iran: the reconfiguration of world power, US-China rivalry and the deterioration of US hegemony. 


Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate MacKenzie, and Tim Sahay from the net zero industrial policy lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 


  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart


Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com



Original theme music06 Mar 202600:02:45

The Polycrisis Podcast original theme music. Composed by Russell Stapleton

02 | Electric World Order | Rest of World31 Mar 202600:28:13

What does the US dollar have to do with energy access in Africa? 

Mark Blyth explains why countries are so keen to cut back their US dollar dependence; and how that’s connected to the way they get energy. Also, why Germany is afraid of Chinese EVs. Then we talk to Adjekai Adjei about how these constraints actually play out in the African continent.

Guests: 

Mark Blyth - professor of international economics at Brown University. 

Naa Adjekai Adjei - Nigeria-based expert in Chinese energy projects in Africa from SE4All, and a fellow at the China Global South Project.   

Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate MacKenzie, and Tim Sahay from the net zero industrial policy lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com



03 | Electric World Order | Demand destruction07 Apr 202600:39:56

How is the Middle East war going to change the energy strategies of many countries? 

Global powers have long relied upon the threat of cutting off fossil energy flows – or the revenues from selling them – to discipline and coerce other countries. The US has done this for decades with oil. Five of the seven countries attacked by the US under the second Trump administration are rich in oil. But the emergence of cheap clean energy tech and electrification complicates the picture. What can history tell us about the motivations of the US around geopolitical dominance and energy? 

Even among the chaos of the current US administration, a desire to perpetuate a globally traded fossil fuel system persists. Oil-producing nations that depend on selling the stuff overseas face existential threats from the energy transition; but the US administration wants to keep oil use high so that it can exert global power. 

Guests: 

Helen Thompson - Professor of political economy, Cambridge University; former co-host of the London Review of Books’ “Talking Politics” podcast

Alex Turnbull - Managing director, Sagax Capital; energy researcher, commodities and energy trader

Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate MacKenzie, and Tim Sahay from the net zero industrial policy lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com







05 | Electric World Order | The US counterrevolution21 Apr 202600:26:08

Can the US stop the electric wave? In 2022 the US introduced its first ever set of serious climate policies. That took an unprecedented collaboration of racial justice, environment and labour interests. But oil and gas interests fought back quickly and effectively. Now the 2nd Trump administration is using sanctions, trade wars, and military power in a bid to slow the energy transition. 

Guests: 

Rhiana Gunn-Wright - Advisor to NY Mayor Zohran Mamdani, former climate policy program director at the Roosevelt Institute

Ted Fertik  - Vice President, manufacturing and industrial policy, Blue-Green Alliance; formerly of the Working Families Party.

Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate Mackenzie, and Tim Sahay from the net zero industrial policy lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Music composed by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com



04 | Electric World Order | Manufacturing Chimerica14 Apr 202600:33:05

China didn’t set out to fix climate change. Its production of clean energy and electrification tech is changing the world, but this particular green revolution is a byproduct of China’s economic strategy and its quest for energy independence. The global financial crisis, the US shale boom, and the US attitude towards China have all contributed to China’s new dominance of clean energy manufacturing.

Guests: 

Jessica Chen Weiss  - Professor of China Studies and the faculty director of the Institute for America, China, and the Future of Global Affairs at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, DC

Jake Werner - Director of the East Asia Program, Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft

Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate Mackenzie, and Tim Sahay from the Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com

Links:
Jessica Chen Weiss in 2024; "The Case Against the China Consensus", Foreign Affairs
CSIS note on the implications of China's rare earths export controls for US military and semiconductor manufacturing 

03 | Demand Destruction | Fossil chaos and electric acceleration12 May 202600:28:14

Why exactly is this 2026 energy shock so different from the 1970s & 2022 shocks? Kate and Tim discuss our current energy security landscape, and outline some of the arguments made in their recent Polycrisis essay, just published with Phenomenal World. They also look at whether it matters that financial markets are becoming re-enthused about renewable energy.

Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate Mackenzie, and Tim Sahay from the Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com

Links:

Dawn of the Electric World Order: Global shockwaves from the war on Iran are accelerating the energy transition - The Polycrisis  May 8, 2026

Investors pile into clean power as Iran war drives push for energy security - Financial Times, May 3, 2026 

China's Green Tech Firms Target New Consumers Hit by Iran War Energy Shock - Bloomberg News, May 11, 2026

Chinese Electrotech is the Big Winner in the Iran War - Paul Krugman's Substack - April 14, 2026

Ember Global Electricity Review 2025 - Record renewables growth led by solar helped push clean power past 40% of global electricity in 2024, but heatwave-related demand spikes led to a small increase in fossil generation.

02 | Demand Destruction | OPEC drama kings06 May 202600:39:19

Is the UAE's departure from OPEC mostly about Gulf geopolitics and kings defending their regimes, or the outlook for oil demand? There is, as ever, a lot of context required to answer this question.

Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate Mackenzie, and Tim Sahay from the Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com

Links:

Mohammed bin Zayed's Dark Vision of the Middle East -  NYT, September 2020 

How Midnight OPEC Dealmaking Won Gulf Unity at Africa’s Expense - Bloomberg, June 2023  

01 | Demand Destruction | US oil is not winning the Iran war28 Apr 202600:18:12

In this first bonus episode, we discuss why the Middle East war is accelerating the destruction of demand for fossil fuels, and why the US won’t become the new provider of "geopolitically secure” oil and gas.

We also argue about whether the data is sufficient – *yet* – to prove our point that this is already happening. 

Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate Mackenzie, and Tim Sahay from the Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com

Links:

America’s bid for energy supremacy is being forged in war - Big Financial Times story setting out the “US is geopolitically secure energy provider” argument. With excellent data viz. 

Iran War Pushes Asia to Think Twice Before Doubling Down on LNG - Bloomberg  

One of the most persuasive anecdotal demonstrations that assumptions about LNG demand now have to be completely revised. “Bloomberg News spoke to more than two dozen executives, traders and analysts across Asia, who painted a picture of a region that had been thought of as the future of LNG, but is now rapidly losing faith in the super-chilled fuel.”

US is making Europe pay dearly for its half-hearted electrification - Cornel Ban, Geoeconomic newsletter. Highlights how Europe’s slow energy transition has left it vulnerable to US energy predation. Echoes some of the arguments in the Permanent Suez report that Tim co-authored in early 2024. 


US ambassador to Europe threatens to remove “privileged” access to LNG - FT, March 24, 2026



04 | Demand Destruction | Smelling the roses in Beijing 20 May 202600:38:14

US-China relations have evolved because of the Middle East war. Trump recently made the first presidential visit to China in nine years. So what are the implications for energy and international development? And why it's not so much a  “China shock” but a “China Squeeze”.

Hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate Mackenzie, and Tim Sahay from the Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com

Links:

Several episodes in our first season featured China-US experts:

EP 1 The quiet revolution included Kyle Chan from Brookings.

EP 4 Manufacturing Chimerica with Jessica Chen-Weiss and Jake Werner. 

Jessica Chen-Weiss also wrote an op-ed for the Financial Times this week A Cold Peace between the US and China is good enough and featured on CNN discussing where the US China relationship is headed 

Jake Werner's piece referred to is here A New Opening for US-China relations (Quincy)

Relevant Polycrisis essays: Conscious Uncoupling , Mercantilist Deals of the Great Powers - three views on technology, decouplers, cooperationists, centrists



05 | Canada gets its China-made EVs 02 Jun 202600:17:09

The Polycrisis team’s having a short break, so we’re sharing a couple of episodes from other podcasts that are very relevant to our themes. 

Chinese EVs are just beginning to arrive in Canada this week; but – as we wrote back in January – the more significant element was Carney’s government making a promise to Canada’s own auto manufacturers: that they could attract new investment and tech from Chinese car companies. And that would lessen their deep reliance upon the US car industry and market – which is doubling down on highly polluting  internal combustion engines, while most of the rest of the world moves rapidly towards electric vehicles.   

This episode is from our friends at The Wire China. It was recorded in April before Trump visited Beijing. 

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com

Links:

Canada's new non-alignment

Some of The Polycrisis thoughts on Canada’s strategy to do the seemingly impossible task of decoupling from the US. Yes, it’s going to be painful, and building a coalition to endure that pain is part of Mark Carney’s plan, as demonstrated in his Davos speech.

China’s Connected Vehicles Widen the U.S.-Canada Disconnect

A Chinese EV maker that is expanding in Canada has ties to a U.S.-sanctioned surveillance company, illustrating the data and security risks connected vehicles pose.

Mercantilism and stabilization

Smelling the roses in the weaponized world economy - more from The Polycrisis

Automakers back Trump plan to roll back fuel economy rules, but seek changes

Alliance for Automotive Innovation backs reduction in stringency proposed by NHTSA. Alliance asks NHTSA to not eliminate credit trading to meet regulatory requirements.


06 | The conjuncture of geopolitics, energy and climate11 Jun 202600:41:23

The Polycrisis team’s taking a short break, we’ll be back next week. 

In the meantime we’re sharing an episode from NuVoices where they interview Kate Mackenzie. 

NuVoices host Solarina Ho asks Kate whether the topic of climate change has been weaponised amid the US-China trade war. Also how the global rush to electric vehicles served global needs, both strategically and environmentally. Kate shares her insights into the latest trend of climate collaboration, renewable energy development, and how we could save our planet at a time of geopolitical uncertainty.

NuVoices is an international editorial collective. It celebrates and supports the diverse creative work of women and other underrepresented communities working on the subject of China (broadly defined).

The Polycrisis is hosted by energy and climate finance expert Kate Mackenzie, and Tim Sahay from the Net Zero Industrial Policy Lab at Johns Hopkins University. They co-author The Polycrisis newsletter, which explores connections between energy, geopolitics, climate change, finance and industry. 

  • Produced by Sarah Allely
  • Original music by Russell Stapleton
  • Mixed by Bethany Stewart

Contact us at: polycrisispodcast@gmail.com

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