Episode 22: Varun Sivaram

On this podcast, Thomas Byrne, CEO of CleanCapital, sits down with Varun Sivaram, a thought leader in the clean energy space. This podcast discusses the bestseller’s new book “Taming the Sun”, which outlines the current clean energy landscape, and the advances needed to unleash it.

Besides being a writer, Varun Sivaram is a physicist and Chief Technology Officer at ReNew Power Ventures, a multibillion-dollar renewable energy firm. He is also a senior research scholar at Columbia University, a board member for the Stanford University Energy and Environment Institutes, and an editorial board member for the journal “Global Transitions”. Previously, Varun was a professor at Georgetown University and is a Rhodes and a Truman Scholar. Dr. Sivaram holds a degree from Stanford University and a Ph.D. from St. John’s College, Oxford University.

Transcript

The Gambler Site

: Set in the fictional German spa town of "Roulettenburg," it follows Alexei Ivanovich, a young tutor who becomes obsessed with gambling to win the favor of his employer’s stepdaughter, Polina.

Written by Don Schlitz and popularized by Kenny Rogers , this country classic uses poker as a universal metaphor for life. The Gambler

Fyodor Dostoevsky's short novel, The Gambler , was written under a desperate, real-life deadline to pay off his own roulette debts. : Set in the fictional German spa town

: The chorus—"You've got to know when to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em"—suggests that survival depends on knowing what to keep and what to walk away from. : The chorus—"You've got to know when to

: The story explores the "illusion of control" and the thrill of the "abyss," where characters find a strange exhilaration in the risk of losing everything.

: On a train "bound for nowhere," a seasoned gambler offers life lessons to the narrator in exchange for a drink and a cigarette.

: Dostoevsky uses gambling as a lens to compare national characters—contrasting what he saw as the calculating prudence of Westerners with the passionate, reckless maximalism of Russians. 2. The Iconic Song: Kenny Rogers (1978)

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