EU-UK Spotlight: Renewables, trade, and the global supply chain
Energy and manufacturing are colliding - reshaping how businesses operate, invest, and grow.
In this episode, Emerson Holmes and Megan Ridley-Kaye explore how the future of energy and manufacturing are increasingly interconnected - and more complex than ever. At its core, manufacturing depends on energy, but delivering energy that is secure, reliable, sustainable, and cost-effective is becoming increasingly challenging. Businesses across the globe are operating in a period of economic and geopolitical uncertainty, with fluctuating input costs, evolving regulation, and shifting policy landscapes making long-term planning and investment decisions more difficult. At the same time, regional differences - particularly between the U.S. and Europe - are shaping how energy transition, security, and industrial strategy are approached.
The discussion highlights the growing importance of resilience and optionality, with companies diversifying supply chains and energy sources to manage risk and maintain continuity. Rising energy demand, driven by AI, data centres, electrification, and advanced manufacturing, is placing additional strain on infrastructure and accelerating the need for innovation and investment. Against this backdrop, businesses must balance competing priorities - cost, sustainability, security, and regulation - while remaining agile in a rapidly changing environment. Ultimately, success will depend on the ability to adapt quickly, invest strategically, and build future-ready operations.
Authored by Emerson Holmes and Megan Ridley-Kaye.