Podcast: the difficulties of decarbonisation
What are energy firms doing to measure and mitigate transition risk?
Tackling the risks posed by energy transition, as well as setting and achieving climate goals, has become a high priority at most energy firms and energy-intensive industrials recently. However, with a myriad of variables to be considered, the environment is extremely challenging.
Additionally, because the discipline of financial climate risk management is still relatively nascent, there is a lack of standardisation when it comes to the tools, methodologies and metrics being used. The challenge is made even more complex by the fact that there are a plethora of ways in which firms could pursue their climate goals – improving energy efficiency, using cleaner energy, investing in offsets for example – as well as an array of policy, regulation and market mechanisms to consider.
In this podcast, Erika Bierschbach and Scobie Mackay talk about the actions firms are taking in response to the energy transition.
As vice-president of energy market operations and resource planning at Austin Energy, Bierschbach provides an interesting insight into her firm’s transition journey. Mackay, who is a managing director in the commodities and global markets group at Macquarie, talks about some of the ways in which firms can green themselves and overcome some of the challenges they will meet on their decarbonisation journeys.
Index
1:25 What are Austin Energy’s transition plans?
4:10 Does becoming carbon free mean you will have no generation from fossil fuels at all?
6:07 By what other means are firms reaching their climate goals? What are the major trends you’re seeing?
9:30 Will offsets continue to be a bridge for some time to come in firms’ greening efforts?
11:10 What have been the biggest challenges with deciding and embarking on your decarbonisation plans?
15:02 Are you counting on some technologies not yet developed or available to you?
16:24 At what stage do firms tend to come to you looking for decarbonisation solutions? Have they set their goals and know how they want to achieve them or is that part of the work you do with them?
17:00 What’s the thought process at Austin Energy in terms of which carbon metrics to use for tracking and measuring climate progress?
24:00 What impact has Covid-19 had on firms’ decarbonisation journeys?
27:36 Have low oil prices caused firms to dial down the urgency of their climate goals?
29:45 Do you think the energy industry is doing enough when it comes to mitigating the effects of climate change?
To listen to other podcasts in this series, click here.
More on Energy transition
Deal of the year: ENGIE and Return’s virtual FPA
Energy Risk Awards 2026: Virtual battery portfolio deal provides a template for scaling battery storage across Europe
Environmental products house of the year: Marex
Energy Risk Awards 2026: Marex sees opportunity for environmental commodities in the latest energy crisis
Electricity house of the year: ENGIE
Energy Risk Awards 2026: ENGIE is doubling down on the energy transition, with a push into batteries and 24/7 carbon-free electricity
Newcomer of the year: Abaxx Exchange
Energy Risk Awards 2026: New exchange sets out to modernise commodity derivatives by aligning them to physical markets
Abaxx: meeting the need for new commodity derivatives
Abaxx revamps commodity hedging with a suite of modern contracts
Energy Risk Debates: risk management in the clean energy space
Panellists discuss the unique issues facing firms in renewables, clean energy and carbon markets
ENGIE’s Daronnat: pricing flexibility in the German battery market
Head of flexibility and structured origination in Germany discusses the role of FPAs and what risk teams must consider
Next-gen PPA contracts reshaping European power markets
As energy market participants seek new ways of capturing value from volatility, new skills are required to structure and price increasingly complex power purchase agreements