Cheap solar power is sending electrical grids into a death spiral
Pakistan and South Africa provide a warning for other countries
In 1812 Frederick Winsor, a madcap entrepreneur, invented the public utility. The idea behind his Gas Light and Coke company, which would supply residents of London, was that instead of each household buying its own energy—bags of coal, bits of firewood—the stuff would be piped directly to them from a central location. More customers, with differing patterns of demand, would allow power plants to be used more efficiently. It was a natural monopoly: scale would spread the cost of the gasworks, the pipes and so on across large numbers of customers, each spending less than they would individually to consume just as much. The idea of “energy as a service” spread across the world.
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Finance & economics
February 15th 2025- How AI will divide the best from the rest
- Why you should repay your mortgage early
- Elon Musk is failing to cut American spending
- Donald Trump’s Super Bowl tariffs are an act of self-harm
- Russian inflation is too high. Does that matter?
- Cheap solar power is sending electrical grids into a death spiral
- The danger of relying on OpenAI’s Deep Research
Trump’s tariffs have so far caused little inflation
Our estimate of their impact will update every month
Stanley Fischer mixed rigour and realism, compassion and calm
The former IMF, Bank of Israel and Federal Reserve official died on May 31st
Trump thinks Americans consume too much. He has a point
He will not like the remedy, however
Who would pay America’s “revenge tax” on foreigners?
Overseas investors at first—then Americans
Why investors lack a theory of everything
Markets have no fundamental laws, which is why they are so interesting
Will the UAE break OPEC?
We find that the Emiratis are flouting the cartel’s rules on a grand scale