We conduct public interest financial analysis on the most profound economic transformation since the industrial revolution: the transition from fossil fuels to clean energy.
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
AGL | CEF NEWSLETTER | China | CHINA MONTHLY ENERGY UPDATE | Coal/electricity/electrification | Critical minerals | CRITICAL MINERALS SERIES 2022-23 | Decarbonisation | Energy Crisis | Finance Sector & Emissions | Green Iron | Hydrogen | India & Adani | Nuclear | Podcasts | Solar | Submissions | Taxes & subsidies | US IRA/ NZIA et al |
REPORT | Whitehaven Coal Climate Risk Assessment: Implications for Safeguard Compliance, Methane Abatement, and Medium-Term Climate Risk
Jointly developed by CarbonBridge and CEF. A quantitative assessment of the climate, regulatory, and Safeguard Mechanism liability implications of Whitehaven Coal’s current and planned production pathways to 2030, as well as a qualitative examination of existing internal cost-benefit analyses and assumptions that underpin Whitehaven’s long-term corporate strategy. Read more
SUBMISSION | Climate Change Authority 2026 ACCU Scheme Review
CEF submission to the public consultation of CCA Issue Paper: Enhancing the ACCU Scheme to support Australia’s 2035 emissions reduction target. Read more
Media
AER AGL Aluminium Batteries Battery Budget BYD CATL CBAM China Coal Critical minerals Decarbonisation Diesel DMO Election Electric Vehicle Electricity/electrification electrostate Energy crisis Federal Election Finance Sector & Emissions Gas Green Iron/Steel Hydrogen India & Adani Methane Nuclear offshore wind Oil OP EDS Peter Dutton Podcasts Renewables Solar Tariff Taxes and subsidies US IRA/EU NZIA et al Wind
Lessons from Beijing: Can the world emulate China’s energy transition success?
Stockhead
In 2024 wind and solar accounted for 37% of total power capacity in the country, poised to overtake coal’s 39% share imminently. With the foundational energy transmission, generation and storage capacity infrastructure now in place, the Chinese energy transition has evolved beyond state-led and funded projects. “What’s really driving China’s transition now isn’t just big state projects – it’s the mix of private innovation, tech partnerships, and everyday choices,” Climate Energy Finance China lead Caroline Wang said. Read more
Records fall as system proves resilient
The Energy
Historically, summer has been the uneasiest period for system operators, but this is now shifting to winter, experts said, and a late summer heatwave when everyone is back at work could yet stress the system. Still, Climate Energy Finance director Tim Buckley highlighted the role of booming solar and batteries to system resilience: “Risks and vulnerability have never been higher, but we also have a lot more fast-to-deploy solutions – when the sun is baking, solar power generation is (almost) highest. And batteries – both utility scale + behind the meter (BTM) home batteries – are a new solution that dramatically build system resilience.” Read more
INTERVIEW | ABC News Tim on Rio Tinto’s coal problem
ABC News
Analyst Tim Buckley, the founder of think tank Climate Energy Finance, thinks that if Rio ends up buying Glencore’s coal mines as part of the deal “they’re probably paying more than they sold them for, having missed several years of very nice profits”. Buckley says coal miners have made “obscene profits” in recent years as the transition to clean energy slowed due to the influence of Donald Trump and prices soared due to Vladimir Putin. “There was some massive windfall war profiteering going on with Putin’s invasion of Ukraine,” he says. But he says costs have also soared and “when prices go back to anything like normal it’s going to be ugly”. Read more
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