Omicron hangs over the oil market; plus, the hottest electric vehicles aren’t cars
By David Callaway, Callaway Climate Insights
Turns out a few cases of Omicron did what President Joe Biden and other Western leaders haven’t been able to for three months: take down oil prices.
Last week’s global scare from the new variant, reportedly out of South Africa, turned stock markets upside down, but also caused oil prices to fall 15% from their highs above $80 a barrel. It helped that OPEC also decided to keep raising oil production, in an early bet that Omicron won’t be the world destroyer it was first feared to be.
Oil prices were back up 3% Monday morning in New York, and the stock market rallied in tandem. While we’re still a week away from any definitive analysis on the danger of Omicron, the lack of worse news over the weekend . . . .
To read this column, all our insights, news and in-depth interviews, please subscribe and support our great climate finance journalism.
Callaway Climate Insights Newsletter
More from ClimateCrisis 247
- Global EV Sales Soar 25%, Big Deal For The Industry
- One Of America’s Richest Companies Walks Away From Climate Change
- Los Angeles $1.29 Trillion GDP At Risk
- Nuclear Energy May Be The Only Solution To Energy Hungry AI