
Columbia Energy Exchange
Columbia University · ColumbiaUEnergy
Show overview
Columbia Energy Exchange has been publishing since 2024, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 118 episodes. That works out to roughly 100 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 42 min and 58 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language News show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 6 days ago, with 38 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 56 episodes published. Published by ColumbiaUEnergy.
From the publisher
Columbia Energy Exchange features in-depth conversations with the world's top energy and climate leaders from government, business, academia and civil society. The program explores today's most pressing opportunities and challenges across energy policy, financial markets, geopolitics, and climate change as well as their implications for both the U.S. and the world.
Latest Episodes
View all 118 episodesMichael Cembalest Does the Math on the Energy Transition
Jake Sullivan and Jon Finer on the US-Iran Deal, Hormuz Realities, and Iran's Nuclear Future
Iran Conflict Brief: The US-Iran Deal and a New Phase of Accommodation
Jessica Uhl on the Fractured Energy Transition: Why Speed Matters Now
Ashley Finan and Amy Roma on Speed, Safety, and Reforming Nuclear Energy
Katie Auth on How the 'Modern Energy Minimum' Can Drive Economic Growth
Speed to Power: Christian Bruch on Siemens Energy's Turnaround
Iran Conflict Brief: How the Iran Standoff is Rewriting US-China Relations
Arctic Expert Iris Ferguson on Greenland's Resources, Geopolitical Risks
Bob McNally and Jason Bordoff on Handling an Energy Crisis
Iran Conflict Brief: Why the UAE Is Leaving OPEC Now
The Iran Oil Shock: Will it Force the World to Re-think the Future of Energy?
Ian Bremmer on Navigating a Fragmenting World
Amos Hochstein on the Strait of Hormuz Opening and Where the War is Headed
Iran Conflict Brief: Will the Ceasefire Hold? Analyzing Tehran's High-Stakes Diplomacy
Rajiv Shah on Advancing Universal Abundant Energy Access
Dan Steingart on Battery Innovation and the Future of Energy Storage
Iran Conflict Brief: Ali Ansari on What's Going on Inside Iran

Iran Conflict Brief: The War's Lasting Impact on Gulf States
While US and Israeli forces have significantly degraded Iran's military and nuclear capability, the global energy landscape remains in a precarious position. For weeks, the Strait of Hormuz has been effectively shut to tanker traffic, causing physical markets to tighten and rationing to spread across Asia. With the US considering an "off-ramp" to declare victory, the world faces a critical dilemma: can the global economy survive a peace that leaves Iran in control of the world's most vital maritime chokepoint? In this episode of the Iran Conflict Brief, host Daniel Sternoff speaks with Robin Mills to provide a view from the ground in Dubai. They discuss the reality of living under frequent drone and missile alerts, the "tit-for-tat" targeting of industrial infrastructure, and what it would take to reopen the Gulf. They also explore the long-term threat to the GCC's economic diversification models and the potential multi-year recovery timeline for regional LNG production. Robin Mills is a Dubai-based non-resident fellow at the Center on Global Energy Policy and the CEO of Qamar Energy. With over two decades of experience in the Middle East, including roles at Shell and the Emirates National Oil Company, Robin is a leading authority on regional oil and gas business development and the author of The Myth of the Oil Crisis. Credits: Hosted by Daniel Sternoff. Produced by Mary Catherine O'Connor, Caroline Pitman, and Kyu Lee. Engineering by Gregory Vilfranc.
Daleep Singh on the Need for a US Industrial Policy Playbook
During President Trump's second term, the administration has taken unprecedented action in the US private sector. The federal government's investments in critical mineral mining and chip manufacturing are two examples. The Trump administration has also embraced tariffs, framing them as tools for economic security and a domestic industrial revival. This shift toward state intervention into private markets, done in the name of national security and economic security, has some bipartisan support. It also has major implications for energy security and the clean energy transition. So how can this new form of American state capitalism be conceptualized? Is the Trump administration's use of these tools different from prior US government programs to support critical industries, like the Biden-era investments under the CHIPS Act? And what are the best strategies for aligning industrial policy with goals around energy security, supply chain resilience, and innovation? Today on the show, Jason Bordoff speaks with Daleep Singh about how the US deploys economic statecraft and the need for a framework to guide its use. Daleep Singh is vice chair and chief global economist at asset management firm PGIM and a thought leader on global policy and macroeconomic trends. He first joined PGIM in 2022, before serving the Biden administration as deputy national security advisor for international economics and deputy director of the National Economic Council. Earlier in his career, he held roles at the New York Federal Reserve and the US Treasury Department. Credits: Hosted by Jason Bordoff and Bill Loveless. Produced by Mary Catherine O'Connor, Caroline Pitman, Alice Manos, and Kyu Lee. Engineering by Gregory Vilfranc.