by Lamia Al Othman
While renewable energy investment continues, critical mineral shortages, supply chain disruptions, and concentration of AI capabilities present new systemic risks. As we near the end of the year we revisit six of the major trends the IRM Energy and Renewables Group predicted at the start of the year and reflect on these.
Introduction
This year has been marked by geopolitical uncertainty, market volatility, and rapid technological progress, with much hype around the increasing use of AI and the need to provide capacity to power the ongoing technological revolution. As new U.S., EU and U.K. policy directions take shape, global energy markets are undergoing major transition, regulatory reform, and policy realignment.
Recent tariff measures and a renewed emphasis on onshoring, particularly in the U.S. and parts of Europe, are reshaping and rebalancing global supply chains and investment flows. The U.S. in particular has accelerated domestic oil production which has spurred significant growth in shale production, with forecasts suggesting a potential oversupply by 2026 as OPEC+ producers also commit to higher output levels. These developments signal a shifting balance between energy security priorities and market stability, with implications extending far beyond domestic markets.
Despite ongoing tensions in the Middle East, oil prices have remained relatively stable, reflected in recent downward pressure on prices. Further OPEC+ decisions in 2025 may further alter this balance. Meanwhile, the accelerating energy transition continues to present technical, financial, and geopolitical challenges, particularly amid persistent flashpoints such as Ukraine–Russia and China–Taiwan.
As events unfold, risk management has moved beyond its role as an essential management discipline and is cementing itself as a powerful partner —enabling organisations to protect investment, support strategic decision-making, and in creating and preserving long-term value.
At the start of 2025, the IRM Energy and Renewables Special Interest Group published their insights as part of the IRM Risk Trends 2025 annual publication. The report identified the most likely factors which would shape 2025 and beyond:
Monitoring and reviewing the performance of these insights and predictions helps us in understanding the accuracy of our methodology and approach towards developing these perspectives, and provide a reference for recalibration. A summary of the key trends identified at the start of the year are outlined In the table below alongside an update on their current status.
Key Risk Trends and Current Status
Cross-Cutting Insights
Across all six risk areas, three broad themes emerge:
These interlinked forces suggest that energy resilience in 2025 will depend on global policy coordination, technological adaptability, and strategic diversification across supply chains and partnerships.
Risk Management’s Role
Risk management is a critical enabler for the energy sector, ensuring resilience by helping organisations and stakeholders navigate a rapidly evolving landscape.
It should, when well implemented and continually improved:
Organisations which have an effective and forward thinking Risk Management approach which focuses on resilience, are able to assess and adapt to shifting regulations and policy divergence, ensuring compliance and strategic alignment whilst supporting decision-making for organisations, investors and governments alike.
Economic instability and supply chain disruptions are also addressed through effective financial risk modeling and supply chain mapping, allowing organisations to hedge against inflation, interest rate shifts, and trade wars, while identifying and mitigating bottlenecks in critical components like PV panels and wind turbines.
Conclusion
The energy sector is increasingly interconnected and complex. The convergence of transition goals and geopolitical fragmentation is making the balancing of sustainability goals far more challenging to achieve and coordinated global action is needed to redress imbalances. Key priorities include strengthening regional energy alliances, diversifying supply chains, and advancing next-generation technologies..
While investor pressures and policy uncertainty remain, advances in high-performance computing and grid technologies are unlocking new opportunities for emerging markets, renewables expansion, and sustainable growth. For both governments and corporations, 2025 stands as a decisive year to transform energy transition ambitions into a resilient future.
The experience of 2022-2025 has delivered a clear lesson: energy security and geopolitics are closely linked. Going forward, the stakeholders in the energy sector must plan for a future where resilience to events such as military escalations, trade ruptures and political instability is just as important as cost and efficiency.
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