What the History-Making Elections of 2024 Could Mean for Energy
A new government in the UK, gridlock in France and the dramatic face-off in the US will have consequences for investment and the transition to clean fuels.
Clockwise from left: Claudia Sheinbaum, Kamala Harris, Keir Starmer, Donald Trump
Photographers: Luis Antonio Rojas/Bloomberg (Sheinbaum); Lawrence Jackson/White House (Harris); Hollie Adams/Bloomberg (Starmer); David Paul Morris/Bloomberg (Trump)
Energy and climate change have been on the ballot around the world this year. Here’s a scorecard of what to expect on infrastructure, power and renewables in five countries.
Keir Starmer’s Labour Party in July ended 14 years of Conservative rule. With the greatest majority since Prime Minister Tony Blair’s 1997 triumph, the new government wants to move quickly.
