Climate & Energy: Daily Briefing delivers sharp, concise news analysis at the intersection of global energy markets, climate policy, and grid infrastructure — every single day. From oil majors reporting record profits to geopolitical flashpoints threatening energy supply chains, this show cuts through the noise to give investors, analysts, policymakers, and energy professionals the intelligence they need to stay ahead. Each episode distills the most consequential developments in fossil fuels, renewables, carbon markets, and energy security into a focused briefing you can absorb on your commute. We cover OPEC decisions, LNG trade flows, offshore wind policy, battery storage breakthroughs, utility regulation, and the financial forces reshaping how the world powers itself. Whether you're tracking the Strait of Hormuz for supply disruption risk, monitoring grid resilience in the face of extreme weather, or following the energy transition's impact on capital markets, Climate & Energy: Daily Briefing is your trusted daily source. No fluff, no filler — just the stories that move markets and shape the future of energy. Subscribe now and never miss a briefing that could inform your next decision.
Shell's Q1 2026 earnings jumped 24% on Hormuz disruption while Ontario's Hydro One quietly built the grid of the future — two stories that define where the energy transition stands today. Oil price volatility, geopolitical risk, and domestic supply chain strategy all in one briefing.
U.S. gas prices hit $4.23 a gallon as U.S.-Iran tensions rattle crude markets, and used EV sales explode 54% in a single month. Today's briefing connects the geopolitical oil risk, the lease-return supply glut, and what OPEC+ cohesion means for prices ahead.
U.S. sanctions on Iran have pushed Brent crude past $110 and briefly above $120 intraday, forcing the Federal Reserve into a policy bind it can't solve with rate tools. Today's briefing breaks down the oil spike, the Fed's hawkish shift, bond market repricing, and what corporate earnings are hiding.