An all-energy stance
A balanced approach—combining hydrocarbons, renewables and emerging clean technologies—is essential for both energy security and sustainability
New technologies will drive the global energy transition, but the transition should be a balancing act between new and existing technologies rather than a drive to eliminate any single energy source, Anuja Tiwari, a senior partner specialising in energy, infrastructure and sustainability at Indian law firm AZB & Partners, told Hydrogen Economist. A balanced approach—combining hydrocarbons, renewables and emerging clean technologies—is essential for both energy security and sustainability, Tiwari said on the sidelines of Gastech in Milan in September. “Every fuel has to play a role in the economy and development of the nation,” she said. “You can change the percentage of that fuel in the
Also in this section
9 March 2026
Hydrogen has not stalled in the UK because the technology does not work. The problem is that the system around it does not yet move at the speed required
4 March 2026
Turmoil in Middle East reminds nascent clean hydrogen sector that its future prospects are dependent on global energy markets and geopolitics
25 February 2026
Low-carbon hydrogen and ammonia development is advancing much more slowly and unevenly than once expected, with high costs and policy uncertainty thinning investment. Meanwhile, surging energy demand is reinforcing the role of natural gas and LNG as the backbone of the global energy system, panellists at LNG2026 said
18 February 2026
Norwegian energy company has dropped a major hydrogen project and paused its CCS expansion plans as demand fails to materialise






