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The Green Hangover: Balancing Enthusiasm with Economic Realities in the Energy Transition
The green hangover captures the gap between climate exuberance and execution. As rates rise and supply chains bite, the green hangover forces a pivot to unit economics, firm capacity, and interoperable demand flexibility.

Marcellus Louroza
Sep 262 min read


Energy transition realism: a balanced path beats wishful thinking
Energy policy is sprinting ahead of physics and economics. Energy transition realism argues for sequencing renewables with firm low-carbon power and market design that protects reliability and affordability.

Marcellus Louroza
Jul 270 min read


Balanced Energy Transition: Reliability, Affordability, and Real-World Constraints
Ideology can’t keep the lights on. This article argues that a balanced energy transition—sequenced, technology-agnostic, and reliability-led—is the only credible way to cut emissions without triggering price shocks or supply risks.

Marcellus Louroza
Jun 12 min read


Grid Stability in High-Renewable Systems: Costs, Tools, and Policy to Keep the Lights On
As wind and solar surge, grid stability becomes mission-critical. This article shows how grid stability can be secured with BESS, demand response, advanced inverter standards, and market rules that reward flexibility—without breaking affordability.

Marcellus Louroza
May 272 min read


Pragmatic Energy Strategy: Meeting Surging Demand while Keeping Power Affordable and Reliable
Digital loads are exploding. This article argues that a pragmatic energy strategy—grounded in portfolio planning, firm capacity, storage, and flexibility—keeps AI, 5G, and industry powered without blowing up affordability or reliability.

Marcellus Louroza
May 182 min read
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