How Texas plans to serve ‘infinite demand’
Eric Goff, founder of Goff Policy on batch zero, transmission planning, and how Texas can serve new load without shifting costs onto existing customers.
Amid sustained regional conflict and global uncertainty, the Arab Gulf states are navigating a shifting economic and strategic landscape with surprising resilience. MEI Senior Fellow Karen Young joins hosts Alistair Taylor and Matthew Czekaj to break down the latest economic data and geopolitical developments affecting the Gulf economies — from the ripple effects of the Israel-Iran war and Houthi maritime threats to energy diversification and global investment strategies. Young unpacks the challenges and opportunities shaping the Gulf’s economic resilience and explains what it all means for regional stability and growth.
Eric Goff, founder of Goff Policy on batch zero, transmission planning, and how Texas can serve new load without shifting costs onto existing customers.
The material may be most closely associated with fast fashion, but high-end labels depend on it heavily because of its versatility. Theyâre not giving it up, even as surging fossil fuel prices push up costs.
Jason Bordoff from Columbia University, formerly at the US National Security Council under the Obama administration, says Iran has high tolerance for navigating the impact of the Strait of Hormuz closure. He also says global inventories and rerouted fuel flows are temporarily cushioning the disruption from the war, but warns prices will rise sharply once those buffers run down and demand destruction sets in.
The summit follows Xi Jinping's meeting with US President Donald Trump and is expected to cover future energy cooperation, Ukraine, and the war in Iran.
Many analyses of what the conflict in the Middle East means for China's energy security have rightly focused on China's oil and natural gas imports from the region.