CONFERENCE

CONFERENCE PROGRAMME

Jamie Webster

Partner and Associate Director
BCG'
s Center for Energy Impact

Partner and Associate Director
BCG'
s Center for Energy Impact

Jamie is a Partner and Associate Director at BCG's Center for Energy Impact where he serves as the COO. He joined BCG in 2016 as an expert in energy markets and geopolitics with an emphasis on natural gas. He is a non-resident fellow at Columbia's Center on Global Energy Policy.


His focus is large macro energy issues that energy C-suite clients need to understand as they develop and refine their strategy. This includes:

•The impacts of Ukraine on natural gas and other fuel markets

•The evolution of new LNG importers

•US and its changing position in natural gas

•The long-term re-emergence of geopolitics

•Implications and drivers of supply vs demand led transitions

•Scenarios and future states of energy and the key uncertainties

•The impacts of carbon pricing on energy markets

•Decarbonization of the shipping industry

•Organizational design of the Chief Economist and external environment function


The founder of BCG's Energy Economist Forum, a gathering of the top Chief economists of energy companies to discuss evolving issues of interest as well as improving the quality of the output and interaction of this function with the rest of the organization.


Prior to joining BCG, Jamie worked at IHS as a Vice President where he led the energy markets and scenarios capability with a geographically dispersed team of 20+. Before IHS, Jamie was a Director at PFC Energy, where he managed the company’s oil market analysis and long-term energy scenarios.


Jamie is a frequent public speaker on energy issues and is regularly quoted and seen in the press. He has testified multiple times to both houses of the US Congress and is currently writing a book about the history of peak demand and what it means for the energy transitions ahead.

Session:
2025-05-21
10:45-11:30

CD02: Addressing the Energy Trilemma
2025-05-22
10:45-11:30

CD20: The Future of New Gases