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The 2022 Energy Reckoning: Reality vs. Expectation

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Thu, Jan 6, 2022 04:06 PM

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We stare from one peak to another on the horizon. We think the valley between is easy to traverse. W

We stare from one peak to another on the horizon. We think the valley between is easy to traverse. We are woefully wrong. [Outsider Club logo] The 2022 Energy Reckoning: Reality vs. Expectation [Adam English Photo] By [Adam English]( Written Jan 06, 2022 A reckoning in the energy sector is coming. One that is recursive and counterproductive. One that involves an increasing dissonance between intentions and actions. It isn’t about how we will ultimately change our energy consumption, the “Big Shift” long prophesied. History's long arc will pan out one way or another. The problem is the idealized timeline we're being sold has nothing to back it up, and a chaotic transition is happening. How much can we truly accomplish if we continue to tepidly attempt to replace historically cheap, abundant energy earlier than we absolutely have to? Can we admit how long it will take and how much it will demand of us? We stare from one peak to another on the horizon. The path is steep and fraught with peril. We think the valley between is easy to traverse. We are woefully wrong. Meet Your New Waitress: Rosie Five million workers have vanished from the workforce, with many establishments having closed for good. But not this restaurant outside of Boston. The solution to the labor shortage could easily be this robot: It’s called Rosie, and it works as the restaurant’s server. You can already find robots like Rosie working in restaurants, hotels, casinos, and retirement homes throughout the U.S. Robots will change everything, and they’re charging toward us at full speed. And I know of three companies on the leading edge of the robot revolution. [Getting in now is like buying Dell, Apple, and Microsoft back at the beginning of the computer revolution.]( Global coal consumption is surging even as it falls in developed nations. The two nations that hold over a third of the global population — China and India — will never stop buying more coal as long as it is cheaper than anything else. It will be. The situation with natural gas is unsustainable in many corners of the world. No one is selling into the spot or contract-based markets in any way that will move prices down where natural gas costs the most. Even then, shipping it from producers to the neediest markets involves supply lines with little excess capacity. For similar reasons, oil is sitting around $80 per barrel with little expectation of a meaningful drop in the foreseeable future. In spite of the rapid percentage gains for EVs and renewables, they are a mere fraction of the larger equation. Ever-increasing energy demand wears away at any gains they make. The mining pollution and baked-in costs for "zero carbon" tech has revealed many companies as shams at worst and "lesser evils" at best. We are insatiable. What we’re really starting to reckon with is the difference between theory and application, valuation and monetization. The transition from lab to foundry, scientists to engineers, and viability to profitability. We face endless issues we choose not to address that are destined to delay, diminish, and thus doom. All the sweeping proclamations from marble parapets by politicians do nothing. The problem is our “Plan B” or lack thereof. If we buy into this concept that there is a single path forward, an approved list of power sources instead of a flexible mix, we will adhere to dogma instead of demand. We will vilify what we should embrace and further entrench this hypocrisy. We have barely begun to stress the system we have today, and the inflation is breaking nearly everything. We were cajoled with dulcet tones through all means of media that this could be solved by a redistribution of capital, one way or another. The tenured residents of the ivory towers were confident that there was plenty of padding for any contingency. Some chose to think it would happen through the free market. Some chose to think that government-dictated mandates would herd us to a brighter future. Both have been proven wrong. We're learning we should have worried far more about the transition. This should not be much of a surprise. Assumptions and idealism from the top down have always been divorced from reality in the energy sector. How much are we willing to pay? Not just in dollars or euros or rupees or yuan. How much can this transition consume as inflation, and scarcity, and the reality of day-to-day costs fall short of best case scenarios? These are the questions we must answer now, and few that intend to demand more of us are willing to address them or what they imply. The New “Fuel of the Future” Could Hand You a Fortune This is the most important energy innovation of the past 100 years. There’s a little-known fuel that’s set to completely revolutionize a $1 trillion sector... but it has nothing to do with hydrogen, nuclear fusion, renewables, or batteries. It’s created using only air and water, which makes this fuel 100% clean and highly affordable. And it can be used for anything and everything. Like your car... cruise ships... even aircraft! This could easily become the new fuel of the future. In fact, it’s already swallowing up the global oil market... [Which is why you should make your move now, before the price skyrockets.]( A society that depends on a lack of change — an assumption that what it exploits will remain static — is a decadent one. It will cannibalize itself until it doesn’t have the energy or drive — figuratively or literally — to follow a different path. History is replete with once vibrant and thriving times that could not persist because what seemed like constants ended up being variables. This is the reckoning we face in 2022, then the next year, then the next. Ever-increasing until we do something, anything, to reduce the pressure in a meaningful way. There is a real cost if we continue to fail to address the realities we face, and it increases the longer we delude ourselves. Solutions already exist, but they need time, money, and effort. Will capital markets properly reward them? Will investors fund them and reward their progress? That we shall see. We will fall short in many ways, I'm sure. Our track record all but proves it. 2022 can be a pivotal year for the stock market to prove it can carve a path forward for the energy sector as central planners continue to fall short. We shall see if it does. Take care, [Adam English] Adam English [follow basic]( [@AdamEnglishOC on Twitter]( Adam's editorial talents and analysis drew the attention of senior editors at [Outsider Club](, which he joined in mid-2012. While he has acquired years of hands-on experience in the editorial room by working side by side with ex-brokers, options floor traders, and financial advisors, he is acutely aware of the challenges faced by retail investors after starting at the ground floor in the financial publishing field. For more on Adam, check out his editor's [page](. *Follow Outsider Club on [Facebook]( and [Twitter](. Browse Our Archives [Biden's Worthless Plan to Lower Food Prices]( [Your 2022 Flight Plan]( [What's Wrong With Gold?]( [Don't Drop the Ball]( [Ending the Year on a "Brown Note"]( --------------------------------------------------------------- This email was sent to {EMAIL}. It is not our intention to send email to anyone who doesn't want it. If you're not sure why you've received this e-letter, or no longer wish to receive it, you may [unsubscribe here]( and view our privacy policy and information on how to manage your subscription. To ensure that you receive future issues of Outsider Club, please add newsletter@outsiderclub.com to your address book or whitelist within your spam settings. For customer service questions or issues, please contact us for assistance. Outsider Club, Copyright © 2022, Outsider Club LLC and Angel Publishing LLC. All rights reserved. 3 E Read Street, Baltimore, MD 21202. Your privacy is important to us – we will never rent or sell your e-mail or personal information. Please read our [Privacy Policy](. Neither the publisher nor the editors are registered investment advisors. Subscribers should not view this publication as offering personalized legal or investment advice. Read our [Details and Disclosures.](

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