Wind farm with beautiful sunset by the water

We conduct public interest financial analysis on the most profound economic transformation since the industrial revolution: the transition from fossil fuels to clean energy.

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About

Climate Energy Finance (CEF) is a think tank established in 2022 that works probono in the public interest to accelerate decarbonisation. We conduct research and analyses on global financial issues related to the global energy transition from fossil fuels to clean energy, as well as the implications for the Australian economy, with a key focus on the threats and opportunities for Australian investments and exports. Read more

Our Work

Presentations |  |  Apr 23, 2026

PRESENTATION | Energy Tracker Asia: Coking Coal Webinar

China is the world leader in almost all zero emissions industries of the future. China is more than half the world’s solar installs – both distributed and utility scale, and more than half the world’s wind installs – dominating both onshore and offshore wind. China installed half the world’s BESS in 2025, and was far more than half of all new energy vehicle sales. Read more

Presentations |  |  Apr 22, 2026

PRESENTATION | PayDirt’s 2026 Critical Battery Minerals Conference, Perth

China’s Growing Global Dominance in Battery Material Supply Chains: Australia’s path forward Read more

Media

CEF in the media  |  Apr 29, 2026

Chinese wind turbine maker accuses UK of ‘politicisation’ over product ban

The Financial Times

In recent years, Chinese companies have come to dominate the market for wind energy equipment thanks to rapid domestic deployment of powerful low-cost turbines. But their overseas investment plans have run into steeper hurdles than companies in other clean energy sectors, such as electric vehicles and solar power, said Tim Buckley, director of Climate Energy Finance, a think tank. Regulators are partly concerned about connecting Chinese-made wind turbines, which are more technologically sophisticated than other clean tech products such as solar modules, to national power grids, he said. But geopolitical concerns and the desire to protect domestic industries have also played a part. Read more

CEF in the media  |  Apr 27, 2026

Financial analyst says Australia will be ‘far less vulnerable’ if we reduce imported oil

ABC News

The foreign minister is travelling to Japan, China and Korea – to try and ensure Australia is prioritised by fuel supplier’s. The three countries provide a mix of diesel, petrol and jet fuel to Australia. Petrol prices have come down from the initial highs triggered by the closure of the strait of Hormuz. Tim Buckley the director of ‘climate energy finance’, says the dip stems from cautious energy companies. Read more

CEF in the media  |  Apr 24, 2026

Will China’s deal with Australian mining giant BHP boost yuan internationalisation?

South China Morning Post

Beyond the BHP deal, Tim Buckley, director at Climate Energy Finance, noted that Fortescue Metals – another major Australian mining firm – had already agreed last year to expand its yuan-denominated trade with China. In return, the Australian miner was rewarded with a five-year, 14-billion-yuan (US$2 billion) syndicated loan led by the Bank of China at a highly favourable 3.8 per cent annual interest rate. “China is … leveraging the US’ geopolitical isolation under [US President Donald] Trump as a way of building momentum away from the world’s historic reliance on the US dollar as the functional and reserve currency,” Buckley said. Read more

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