53 episodes

The Last Optimist is hosted by Mark P. Mills—author, businessman, physicist, contributing editor to the City Journal, and distinguished senior fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation—and features discussions about inventing our future. Mark's latest book is “The Cloud Revolution: How The Convergence of Emerging Technologies Will Unleash the Next Economic Boom and a Roaring 2020s.

The Last Optimist The Manhattan Institute

    • News

The Last Optimist is hosted by Mark P. Mills—author, businessman, physicist, contributing editor to the City Journal, and distinguished senior fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation—and features discussions about inventing our future. Mark's latest book is “The Cloud Revolution: How The Convergence of Emerging Technologies Will Unleash the Next Economic Boom and a Roaring 2020s.

    Information About Energy is More Critical Than Ever: Time to Reboot the IEA

    Information About Energy is More Critical Than Ever: Time to Reboot the IEA

    The International Energy Agency (IEA) is 50 years old this year, created because of the 1973/4 “oil shock” that triggered a global recession. Today’s energy markets and geopolitics are just as vulnerable to similar disruptions, but the IEA has since shifted its mission to advocate for abandoning hydrocarbons, erasing its ability to serve as a credible, unbiased source of the kind of energy information vital for risk analysis and planning. It’s time to reform the IEA.

    • 36 min
    The Imminent Prospect of a Very Bad Idea: A Carbon Tax

    The Imminent Prospect of a Very Bad Idea: A Carbon Tax

    At the end of 2023, Congress had four different pieces of proposed legislation directed at creating a carbon tax; three had bipartisan support. Thus, bookmakers see a rising prospect for some form of carbon tax. We return to unbundling why that’s such a bad idea, and the flaws in claiming that it would unleash “market forces” to create alternatives.
    For a summary of the state of the bad idea see The Carbon Tax Cliff, City Journal, Mark P. Mills, January 3, 2024.

    • 33 min
    Chemicals, Climate, Carbon, and a Cri de Coeur for Rational Dialogue

    Chemicals, Climate, Carbon, and a Cri de Coeur for Rational Dialogue

    Joining this episode, Peter Huntsman - CEO of a multi-billion-dollar US-based multinational with operations in 30 countries - for a far ranging-conversation about the role and nature of chemicals (used in everything from batteries to Boeings), workplace culture, regulations, energy issues, and the challenges of global competition.
    Biography of Peter Huntsman, Chairman, CEO, Huntsman CorporationThe Wall Street Journal interview with Peter Huntsman.

    • 48 min
    Will Climate Policies Throttle the A.I. Era?

    Will Climate Policies Throttle the A.I. Era?

    We revisit, with new research, the astonishing energy appetite of artificial intelligence (A.I.), a reality completely absent from the just-released 18,000 word Executive Order on A.I. Yet the Administration's “whole-of-government” pursuit of climate policies is seen everywhere else. Meanwhile, fueling A.I. will propel the world beyond today’s zettabyte of digital traffic into the yottabyte era.

    Links:
    A coalition of digital and cloud experts comes together at the newly announced Yotta organization.The White House Executive Order on Artificial Intelligence.

    • 42 min
    Hybrid-electric Cars: Faster, Cheaper, Better and Fairer Way to Cut Oil Use

    Hybrid-electric Cars: Faster, Cheaper, Better and Fairer Way to Cut Oil Use

    If one feels compelled, and by that, I mean if Congress and state policymakers feel compelled to subsidize ways to reduce the amount of oil used by vehicles on the roads, the facts point to hybrids making far more sense. Sales figures in recent months suggest that consumers think so too.



    Related to this episode’s topic, to watch or listen to the October 2023 “great debate” over EVs between Mark Mills and Rosario Fortugno, click here for that SOHO Forum Debate recording.

    • 32 min
    Artificial Intelligence and its Energy Appetite

    Artificial Intelligence and its Energy Appetite

    The invention of useful artificial intelligence (AI), epitomized by the hype over ChatGPT, is the latest example of a basic truth about technology: There have always been many more inventions that use energy than those that can produce it. Only a few inventions over history are as energy-hungry as AI; it ranks up there with the invention of the automobile and aircraft.

    • 42 min

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