Post by Divya S
People & Operations Executive
One of the most consequential questions emerging from the global energy transition is no longer simply who can produce green hydrogen — but who gets to define the rules that govern it. This thought-provoking article, “The Geopolitics of Green Hydrogen: Who Gets to Write the Rules?”, explores how the future hydrogen economy may be shaped not only by technology and capital, but by certification systems, regulatory standards, trade frameworks, and geopolitical influence. As countries and corporations race toward net-zero commitments, control over standards could become as strategically important as control over energy resources themselves. The implications extend far beyond climate policy — touching global trade, investment flows, industrial competitiveness, energy security, and international governance. Particularly relevant for professionals working across sustainable finance, asset management, ESG strategy, climate policy, consulting, corporate law, risk advisory, and international affairs. A timely contribution to the broader conversation on how emerging energy systems will be governed — and who will shape the institutions behind them. Read here: https://lnkd.in/dUcGP-Uc #GreenHydrogen #EnergyTransition #ESG #SustainableFinance #AssetManagement #ResponsibleInvesting #ClimateRisk #EnergySecurity #ClimatePolicy #Geopolitics #InternationalRelations #GlobalGovernance #NetZero #Decarbonization #InstitutionalInvestors #PrivateEquity #InfrastructureInvestment #RiskManagement #StrategyConsulting #ManagementConsulting #CorporateGovernance #EnvironmentalLaw #PublicPolicy #ThinkTanks #Sustainability #FutureOfEnergy #HydrogenEconomy #LSE #EnergyMarkets #GlobalTrade