94. Heat Pumps are Hot - Mar23

94. Heat Pumps are Hot - Mar23

Suivant

210. Our Predictions for 2026

Happy New Year energy nerdsAs tradition demands (and lawyers insist), the first episode of the year is the annual ritual where Gerard, Laurent, and Michael boldly predict the future of the energy transition… and then publicly roast themselves for last year’s bad calls.Before unle ...  Afficher plus

209. Deals, Scandals and other memorable moments of 2025

For our final episode of the year, Laurent jumped onto the Wolfe Power podcast, where he and host Alex Wolfe took a no-nonsense tour through the big energy moments that shaped 2025. Deals of the Year: The spectacular offshore wind meltdown in the US — Orsted’s year of pain — cont ...  Afficher plus

Épisodes Recommandés

Green Heat (And Cooling) Under Our Feet - Ep154: Tamsin Lishman
Cleaning Up: Leadership in an Age of Climate Change

Tamsin Lishman joins Bryony this week to talk heat pumps. Tamsin is CEO of Kensa Group, a Cornwall-based manufacturer and installer of ground source heat pumps. Kensa is the UK's only manufacturer of ground source heat pumps. Both air source and ground source heat pumps are ra ...

  Afficher plus

EQT Says High Power Bills to Drive Energy Development
Bloomberg Businessweek

Anger over rising energy costs will eventually force states to allow more natural gas infrastructure to be built in the US, according to one of the nation’s largest producers of the fuel. “We’ve never produced more energy than we’re producing now, but Americans’ energy bills are ...  Afficher plus

Les pompes à chaleur permettent-elles vraiment de faire des économies d'énergie ?
Maintenant, vous savez

Avec l'envolée des coûts de l'énergie à l'hiver 2024, de plus en plus de ménages français troquent leur chaudière pour une pompe à chaleur. Alors qu'habituellement, on se chauffe à l'électricité ou au gaz en France, cette nouvelle pratique permettrait d'alléger le portefeuille e ...  Afficher plus

Why are we still flaring gas?
Catalyst with Shayle Kann

Oil producers waste a lot of natural gas. Last year they flared 150 billion cubic meters of associated gas into the atmosphere, equivalent to about half the global carbon emissions of aviation over a 30-year period. So why are oil producers burning a valuable commodity like gas? ...  Afficher plus