Negative Oil Is Positive for Clean Power
Electricity markets were built for this sort of thing.
No stranger to negative prices.
Photographer: DAVID MCNEW/AFP/Getty Images
One word explains oil’s recent crash to negative prices: inertia. Those barrels in the pipeline, and the forces that put them there, don’t respond quickly to sudden change. Supertanker symbolism aside, that matters in a real way for a defining competition of the energy transition: oil versus electricity.
Investors paid to offload their oil futures on April 20 because they couldn’t take physical delivery of the barrels. Oil is toxic; bring some home and it could kill you. If tanks aren’t available or too expensive — because, say, a pandemic has led to a rush of spare barrels into storage — then you’ll pay someone to take it.