Articles

  • 3 weeks ago | energypolicy.columbia.edu | Jason Bordoff

    Guest Dan Jørgensen European Commissioner for Energy and Housing Your browser does not support the audio element. Transcript Dan Jørgensen: We are under pressure with regards to our competitiveness because even though I’ve given you some numbers already, and I will add to them in a minute of why it’s going in the right direction still, we do pay too much power energy in Europe primarily because we are dependent on fossil fuel from other countries.

  • 1 month ago | energypolicy.columbia.edu | Jason Bordoff

    Guests Javier Blas Opinion Columnist, Bloomberg Ben Geman Energy & Climate Reporter, Axios Your browser does not support the audio element. Transcript Javier Blas: A senior executive of an American oil company told me, he said, “We thought that Chris Wright, the energy secretary, was our guy. Someone from the industry. And here in Houston, we just realized that Mr. Wright is Trump’s guy. He’s not our guy.

  • 1 month ago | energypolicy.columbia.edu | Jason Bordoff

    Guest Jon Finer Former U.S. Deputy National Security Advisor Your browser does not support the audio element. Transcript Jon Finer: I think it’s pretty self-evident at this point that the changing climate and what that leads to in terms of how people experience it — extreme weather, scarcity of key resources — is a major driver of instability in the world. And by the way, this is not just a former Democratic administration official who believes this.

  • 1 month ago | energypolicy.columbia.edu | Jason Bordoff

    Guest Dave Turk Former Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of Energy Your browser does not support the audio element. Transcript David Turk: For the world to solve climate change, the US needs to lead. If we are not leading both in terms of what we do domestically, but also in terms of what we do very pragmatically in cooperation with our allies, with our partners around the world, it’s just not going to get done. We are an innovation powerhouse or a clean energy powerhouse.

  • 1 month ago | foreignaffairs.com | Michael Albertus |Jason Bordoff |MEGHAN L. O’SULLIVAN |Elizabeth Buchanan

    Since the mid-twentieth century, the power dynamics and system of alliances that made up the postwar global order provided a strong check on campaigns to conquer and acquire territory—an otherwise enduring feature of human history. But rather than marking a definitive break from the aggression of the past, this era of relative restraint now seems to have been merely a brief deviation from the historical pattern.

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Jason Bordoff
Jason Bordoff @JasonBordoff
18 Apr 25

RT @ColumbiaUEnergy: Climate threats can impact "large-scale migrations, which can destabilize regions and strain national security," CGEP…

Jason Bordoff
Jason Bordoff @JasonBordoff
16 Apr 25

Thanks @SilveradoPolicy for the invitation to speak at the third Annual Summit about how today’s turbulent geopolitics and Trump admin policy changes will affect the energy outlook and US manufacturing https://t.co/L9FNCxit6L

Jason Bordoff
Jason Bordoff @JasonBordoff
15 Apr 25

As always, fascinating to talk with @jasonfurman. We discussed Trump’s tariffs, the future of the neoliberal economic order, industrial policy & economic security, his @ForeignAffairs critique of Bideneconomics, and what all this means for energy. Take a listen!

Center on Global Energy Policy
Center on Global Energy Policy @ColumbiaUEnergy

🎧 On this week's episode of #ColumbiaEnergyExchange, host @JasonBordoff talks with @jasonfurman, economics professor at @Harvard, about the flurry of Trump administration tariffs and how they could play out for the energy industry. Listen now 👇