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
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REPORT | Raw Power: China locks-in global dominance of critical minerals and metals with $120bn outbound investment surge
China’s ‘going global’ strategy to secure value chains in zero-emissions industries is also boosting its partner economies, with lessons for Australia. Read more
Media
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Australia needs to pull out its green finger
Paydirt Media
“Three years ago, Australia had more than 50% of the world’s lithium production, but not anymore,” Climate Energy Finance (CEF) director and former Citigroup managing director Tim Buckley told Paydirt. “This globally dominant position has been eroded significantly. By the start of 2026, domestic mines in China produce more than Australia and I tracked 15 other countries where China has invested in spodumene mines.” The CEF report found China’s investment in clean energy technology and its associated value chain has been pronounced, spending more than $US120 billion on upstream mining and processing projects since 2023 and more than $US220 billion on midstream and downstream cleantech manufacturing and renewables infrastructure in the same period. In the same period, Chinese investment into Australia has collapsed by 85%. Read more
‘Massive reminder of geopolitical risk’: Australia positioned to capture fleeing battery storage investment amid Middle East tension
Energy Storage News
Australia’s AU$50 billion (US$34 billion) annual dependence on imported oil and diesel has become a critical vulnerability that could paradoxically accelerate the nation’s battery storage and renewable energy transformation, according to Tim Buckley, founder and director of Climate Energy Finance. Speaking on the sidelines of the Energy Storage Summit Australia 2026 in Sydney, Buckley warns that recent geopolitical developments, including China’s announcement that it would halt refined oil product exports and escalating US-Iran tensions, have exposed the fragility of Australia’s energy security and created an urgent case for domestic investment in clean energy infrastructure. Read more
Climate Wars. Iran war speeds transition to renewable energy
Michael West Media
There is no such lack of cleantech ambition by the mining magnates’ large customers in China, however. As energy analyst Tim Buckley puts it, the “carnage unleashed by the US-Iran conflict has exposed the fragility – and concentration – of global fossil fuel supply chains”. “ … China is sticking to its script; staying clear of the fray and branding itself as the steady alternative to an unpredictable America. In doing so, it is weaponising its cleantech supremacy as the ultimate tool of green soft power. China has spent years pursuing its ‘self-sufficiency’ drive and electrifying its economy, says Buckley. It has spent more than $US220B building cleantech manufacturing, grids and energy infrastructure overseas since 2023, “and another $US120B securing critical minerals, strategic metals and upstream processing”. Read more
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