Benjamin H. Bradlow
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bhbradlow.bsky.social
Benjamin H. Bradlow
@bhbradlow.bsky.social
Assistant Professor of Sociology and International Affairs, @princeton.edu.
Visiting Researcher, Wits Southern Center for Inequality Studies.
CIFAR Azrieli Global Scholar.
Climate, urbanization, tech, democracy, Global South.
bradlow.princeton.edu
Pinned
My new op-ed essay in the @financialtimes.com.

on.ft.com/4kKqiTb

The growing Brics divide between carbon and electro-states
The growing Brics divide between carbon and electro-states
Energy systems can shape political institutions and make some nations more vulnerable to trade wars than others
on.ft.com
“Countries that have already industrialised, with per capita incomes well above the average of the global south and Brazil, should be a little more aware that we live in a single ecosystem... for it to be fair, there has to be money on the table.”

www.ft.com/content/f85a...
Why Latin America can’t quit oil
As COP30 approaches, Brazil and Colombia offer competing visions of a ‘just energy transition’ for developing countries
www.ft.com
November 6, 2025 at 8:01 PM
"That Brazil chose Chinese electric vehicles as the official means of transporting Mr. Lula and other world leaders sent a clear signal to many: In its quest to transform its roads and its economy, Latin America’s largest nation would be turning to China."

www.nytimes.com/2025/11/06/c...
A Chinese E.V. Delivers the Host, and a Message, at the Global Climate Summit
www.nytimes.com
November 6, 2025 at 7:57 PM
The fact is that there are plenty of auto firms around the world making profitable EVs.

If the US wants to pursue bringing back manufacturing with this kind of profound uncompetitiveness, the country is heading towards an even more wasteful and plutocratic future than the present.
Exclusive: Ford considers terminating the electric version of its F-150 pickup, a move that would make the money-losing truck America's first major EV casualty.
Exclusive | Ford Considers Scrapping Electric Version of F-150 Truck
Once hyped as a ‘smartphone that can tow,’ production of money-losing EV pickup may be shut down for good.
on.wsj.com
November 6, 2025 at 7:40 PM
"Overall, Europe — an early adopter of EVs — had received the bulk of the Chinese investments for component and full vehicle manufacturing. That dynamic shifted w/ Latin America receiving most of the investment in vehicle assembly in the second quarter of this year."
restofworld.org/2025/china-e...
China’s $143 billion push to dominate the global EV industry
After years of investing in Europe, Chinese EV and battery firms are turning to Asia, Africa, and Latin America
restofworld.org
November 4, 2025 at 5:10 PM
"Our clean-energy future is no longer being decided in the boardrooms of the old energy powers, but in the bustling cities and industrial corridors of the global south... The era when American politics could make or break global climate co-operation is over."
Changes in technology, economics and human ingenuity are “bending towards a future where affordable, clean energy for all can finally be a reality”, writes Christiana Figueres. But, she argues, innovation still has to outpace climate impacts econ.st/3JC81Li

Illustration: Dan Williams
November 4, 2025 at 2:12 PM
It’s hard to think of an industry in which the global technological frontier has become so remade in the past century than the auto sector.

Reading this en route to what was once technological ground zero for car manufacturing: Detroit, “Motor City”.

@tomsugrue.bsky.social @rkeil.bsky.social
October 26, 2025 at 2:21 PM
Coal generation is not going to stop in South Africa.

Other sources are going to grow.

As electricity and energy minister Ramakgopa put it:

“We are going to get cleaner, but we are not abandoning coal. We don’t have a coal problem. We have an emissions problem.”

www.opis.com/resources/en...
October 23, 2025 at 8:56 PM
The metalworkers' union in Bahia has brought a case against BYD's factory in northeast Brazil, accusing the firm of campaigning to get factory workers to oppose the union.
October 23, 2025 at 8:52 PM
Very excited to have received support from CIFAR for new interdisciplinary research with Haotian Wang (Rice University, chemical engineering) on “Biofuels or Batteries: Dual Pathways for Decarbonizing Brazil's Auto Sector”!

More to come…
October 21, 2025 at 1:12 PM
Just published: my review of @brettchristophers.bsky.social's excellent "The Price Is Wrong," in the @bjsociology.bsky.social.

doi.org/10.1111/1468...
October 16, 2025 at 2:31 PM
While announcing a major investment in EV charging in South Africa, BYD says it has no plans to manufacture in the country. Seems this is a buildout to support expanding imports, posing a challenge to OEMs.

techcentral.co.za/byd-south-af...
BYD to blanket South Africa with megawatt-scale EV charging network
Construction of the 1MW supercharger network will commence in the second quarter of 2026, BYD has announced.
techcentral.co.za
October 16, 2025 at 12:47 PM
This new report highlights challenges to Brazil's EV transition, largely focusing on the alternate technological path of ethanol hybrids.

theicct.org/publication/...
Electric vehicle development and strategies among leading automakers: Comparing Brazil with other major markets  - International Council on Clean Transportation
This brief examines the electric vehicle (EV) deployment strategies of the leading automakers in the Brazilian light-duty vehicle market and compares them with approaches adopted in other major region...
theicct.org
October 15, 2025 at 2:20 PM
There's a good case that this year's economics Nobel has more relevance to meaningful climate action than the prize given to Nordhaus in 2018.

on.ft.com/4nY0RAe
Why green growth needs creative destruction
Big business lobbying holds back growth, Nobel-winning economists suggest
on.ft.com
October 15, 2025 at 1:34 PM
Reposted by Benjamin H. Bradlow
Aghion (et al) have a paper on China, they recognised long ago & before many that the Chinese model departs from the East Asia model in having a Darwinian struggle-to-the-death competition of firms behind a wall of protection. It pairs Schumpeterian growth theory w the economics of industrial policy
October 13, 2025 at 1:42 PM
Looking forward to this!
In The Invention of the Future, Bruno Carvalho lays out “a history . . . of humanity’s belief in progress and a better future as demonstrated in the spread of urbanization.” Read the full review in Kirkus:
THE INVENTION OF THE FUTURE | Kirkus Reviews
A history as well as a philosophical examination of humanity’s belief in progress and a better future as demonstrated in the spread of urbanization.
www.kirkusreviews.com
October 14, 2025 at 2:46 PM
Stella Li may end up the most important business figure to shape global manufacturing — and climate change — since Henry Ford.

on.ft.com/4n0am0b ‘The Stella show’: the executive at the heart of BYD’s global push
‘The Stella show’: the executive at the heart of BYD’s global push
Stella Li is steering the Chinese carmaker through price wars at home and tariffs abroad in its pursuit of EV dominance
on.ft.com
October 14, 2025 at 12:22 PM
Something strange about how history and qualitative methodologies are so deeply embedded in the work of the last few economics Nobel picks, while the field itself does not appear to reward these interests in younger scholars.
October 13, 2025 at 1:57 PM
We're going to keep seeing stories like this all over the world as long as Western firms continue to treat Chinese technology as backward.

You cannot have meaningful industrial policy in the auto sector without significant technology / R&D policy.

And this goes for country contexts of all incomes
NEW: Carmakers have made demands to Brussels in a doc seen by FT to ease the combustion engine ban including giving extra credits for sales of small cars and including carbon neutral fuels...

www.ft.com/content/5ab7...
Carmakers push EU to ease 2035 petrol car ban ahead of review
Industry body says policy is based ‘on outdated premises and optimistic assumptions’
www.ft.com
October 9, 2025 at 12:52 PM
Reposted by Benjamin H. Bradlow
Today is the day!!! Existential Politics is out in the world!

Read about why we’re doing climate policy wrong (too focused on measuring emissions) & what we should do instead (focus on $$ to constrain fossil asset owners & expand green asset owners). Just in time for #COP30.
Existential Politics
A new way to tackle the real politics of climate change through asset revaluation
press.princeton.edu
October 7, 2025 at 12:03 PM
Reposted by Benjamin H. Bradlow
If profits shape the energy transition we need to understand the biggest profit event this century: the 2022 oil and gas price spike.

Very happy our paper is now out in Energy Research & Social Science. Thread by lead-author @gregorsemieniuk.bsky.social 👇
🚨NEW PAPER🚨
We all know the 2022 energy price shock fueled the cost of living crisis. It also caused a profit bonanza for the very rich. We show the US reaped the largest profits ($377bn) of any country. 50% went to the richest 1%, only 1% to the bottom 50%. A🧵 www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
October 8, 2025 at 4:59 PM
Reposted by Benjamin H. Bradlow
It's the official publication day for ETHANOL: A HEMISPHERIC HISTORY FOR THE FUTURE OF BIOFUELS. Want to know why the US turns 40 percent of the corn crop into fuel? How the US and Brazil became the world's two largest ethanol producers? Tom Rogers and I have answers.
www.oupress.com/978080619601...
Ethanol - University of Oklahoma Press
Though ethanol, a liquid fuel made from agricultural byproducts, has generated controversy in recent years—good or bad for the environment? a big-ag boon o...
www.oupress.com
October 7, 2025 at 7:07 PM
Here’s me nerding out on the hybrid assembly line at the Toyota factory in Ethekwini.
October 6, 2025 at 3:06 PM