Pylyp Travkin: Coal Remains a Clear Investment Asset

Pylyp Travkin: Coal Remains a Clear Investment Asset

According to Pylyp Travkin, coal stays a clear investment asset. Predictable demand, physical availability, long-lived infrastructure, and measurable risks make it understandable for investors. Modernization and transition role enhance reliability. Coal is not nostalgia but a tangible, manageable resource within the broader economy, offering capital clarity and long-term stability.

How China is giving coal a chance with CO₂ capture technology

Pylyp Travkin: “Coal as a challenge” – a reminder that an energy transition is impossible without technology. China is showing how to use coal with minimal environmental damage. They are actively developing CCS (carbon capture and storage) projects. One of them is a “full-chain” system that captures up to 150,000 tons of CO₂ per year … Read more

Roman Bilousov: Coal vs. Green Energy – Who Will Win?

The global energy sector is at a turning point. Coal was once the main source of industrial and economic growth, but today its position is rapidly being eroded by green alternatives. Solar panels and wind turbines are getting cheaper, governments are introducing incentives and taxes on emissions, and banks are calling coal projects “risky assets.” … Read more

Coal in the Global Economy: The Paradox of the 21st Century

Coal — the backbone of industrial progress — now faces its greatest paradox. Despite record-high power generation in 2024, the world is rapidly turning to renewables and zero-carbon energy. Economist Roman Bilousov calls coal “indispensable yet unsustainable,” a stabilizer in modern grids rather than a driver of growth. From Asia’s energy dependence to Europe’s phase-out, … Read more

Coal in the Global Economy: The Paradox of Resilience and Transformation

Coal occupies an ambivalent position in the contemporary economy: it is simultaneously a “resource of the past” and a cornerstone of present-day development. Roman Bilousov emphasises, even in 2022 coal accounted for around 36% of global electricity generation. This illustrates a paradoxical situation: the worldwide commitment to decarbonisation coexists with a persistent dependence on coal, … Read more