World Bank scraps climate financing after facing pressure from Trump
The 45% target was set following the United Nations’ climate conference in 2023, pledging the funding to climate-related projects by 2025.
Past Event
December 1, 2016
11:00 am - 1:00 pm
Columbia Global Centers | Mumbai held a panel discussion where leading experts from Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy provided an overview of energy and climate policy after the U.S. elections, shared their research findings on the latest trends in global oil and natural gas markets, and discussed implications for countries like India.
Distinguished speakers included:
Jason Bordoff, Founding Director of the Center and Professor of Professional Practice in the School of International and Public Affairs
Antoine Halff, Senior Fellow and Director of the Global Oil Markets Research Program
Tim Boersma, Senior Research Scholar and Director of Global Natural Gas Markets
On February 28, the United States and Israel launched an attack on Iran, resulting in the deaths of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Hosseini Khamenei and senior Iranian leaders...
The recent military operation to remove Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores raises several implications for the future of Venezuela and Latin America, geopolitics, and energy markets. Cosponsored by SIPA’s Institute of Global Politics (IGP) and Center for Global Energy Policy (CGEP), along with Columbia’s Institute of Latin American Studies (ILAS), this webinar will analyze the circumstances and impact of their capture and extradition to New York to face narcoterrorism and drug trafficking charges.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWh5WQVVMLc Global gas markets are set to undergo major changes by the end of the decade, with the coming wave of liquefied natural gas (LNG) production capacity poised...
On October 22, the United States Department of the Treasury announced the imposition of sanctions on Russia’s two largest oil companies, Rosneft and Lukoil, as a penalty for what it characterized as a lack of Russian commitment to ending the war in Ukraine.
CHRONIQUE. Nouvelles usines de liquéfaction et augmentation des exportations expliquent, entre autres, pourquoi les prix du gaz ne connaissent pas le pic observé en 2022, lors de l’invasion de l’Ukraine. Mais cette stabilité des prix ne traversera pas l’été, écrit Anne-Sophie Corbeau, spécialiste de l’énergie au Center on Global Energy Policy de l’Université Columbia
Europe is entering the 2026 gas injection season with its lowest level of gas in storage since 2018.