According to the International Energy Agency, global coal consumption appears to have reached its peak and is expected to enter a gradual decline phase over the coming five years. This marks a significant inflection point in the global energy landscape, reflecting the accelerating shift toward renewable sources and cleaner energy infrastructure.
The implications extend beyond just environmental policy—energy transitions directly shape macroeconomic cycles, inflation trajectories, and asset valuations. When traditional energy sources contract while alternative energy investments scale up, capital flows shift fundamentally. For those tracking market cycles and macroeconomic trends, this coal decline trajectory deserves attention as a bellwether for broader economic rebalancing ahead.
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SelfCustodyBro
· 17h ago
Coal peaking? Well, now capital will flow into new energy. Energy transition = macro cycle change, inflation expectations also shift, and that's the key.
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Five-year gradual decline... to put it simply, the true capital rotation has just begun. Hong Kong stock's new energy ETF is about to take off again.
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The shift in the energy landscape means the inflation trajectory is being rewritten, right? Those who grasp the energy transition node will be the winners.
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IEA says coal has peaked. Now the question is who will absorb this wave of capital inflow... The pump cycle for renewable infrastructure might last even longer.
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It's not that coal decline ≈ the end of the old macro cycle; a new economic rebalancing is coming... Does this have implications for the crypto market? Or am I overthinking it?
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MEV_Whisperer
· 17h ago
Coal has peaked... But can it really decline this much in five years? It doesn't seem like the coal bosses will be so willing to accept it.
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BearHugger
· 17h ago
Coal has peaked, finally... Now the traditional energy folks will be panicking, and capital flow will undergo a major reshuffle.
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GateUser-3824aa38
· 17h ago
Has coal reached its peak? Now traditional energy is about to be reshuffled. Capital is rushing into new energy, and inflation and asset valuations will all have to change accordingly. Stay alert.
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DevChive
· 17h ago
The idea that coal has peaked has been talked about for so many years, and this time the IEA has essentially confirmed it. To put it simply, big capital should start moving into green energy. This wave of energy transition presents opportunities that are much greater than environmental protection significance.
According to the International Energy Agency, global coal consumption appears to have reached its peak and is expected to enter a gradual decline phase over the coming five years. This marks a significant inflection point in the global energy landscape, reflecting the accelerating shift toward renewable sources and cleaner energy infrastructure.
The implications extend beyond just environmental policy—energy transitions directly shape macroeconomic cycles, inflation trajectories, and asset valuations. When traditional energy sources contract while alternative energy investments scale up, capital flows shift fundamentally. For those tracking market cycles and macroeconomic trends, this coal decline trajectory deserves attention as a bellwether for broader economic rebalancing ahead.