There's quite a lot going in the energy sector with shifts to renewables, Russia going nuts, countries implementing various policies,etc. Anyone's got some resources that I could deep dive or at least build decent understand of what's going?
If nobody else answers, my tried and true technique is to refine exactly what I want to study, then try to map that into a college-level course, steal a syllabus, find a textbook, begin self-education.<p>Oh! Also there’s this guy Vaclav Smil you might check out. He is an author of <i>absolute compendiums</i> on all things energy. “Energy & Civilization” comes to mind.
I'm not sure if you were interested in the technical aspects or the geopolitical and economic parts.<p>If the former, try a college energy engineering or environmental engineering textbook. Or for hands on stuff, check out this wiki: appropedia.org<p>I work in the solar industry (as a dev) and have previously taken some of the coursework meant to prepare installers (NABCEP). An entry level PV certification takes about a full time week to learn, for example. Pretty thorough stuff covering the industry basics.<p>For analysis, the National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL) publishes a lot of free research.<p>Note that everything I said is biases towards the renewables side. I am not familiar with how oil and gas works.
This video might be useful as a broad overview of oil and gas[0]<p>This podcast on nuclear energy was pretty informative but ultimately still left me with many questions.[1]<p>[0] <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWyhKobyM68" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWyhKobyM68</a><p>[1] <a href="https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-future-of-nuclear-energy-politics-culture/id1549324835?i=1000577053111" rel="nofollow">https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-future-of-nuclear-...</a>
Can you expand on which parts of the energy sector you want further knowledge of? The question you posed is too broad for anyone to be able to meaningfully reply.