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Energy diplomacy

Energy diplomacy is a form of diplomacy, and a subfield of international relations. It is closely related to its principal, foreign policy, and to overall national security, specifically energy security. Energy diplomacy began in the first half of the twentieth century and emerged as a term during the second oil crisis as a means of describing OPEC's actions. It has since mainly focused on the securitization of energy supplies, primarily fossil fuels, but also nuclear energy and increasingly sustainable energy, on a country or bloc basis.

Background

Energy diplomacy emerged as a term during the second oil crisis as a means of describing OPEC's actions and of characterizing the quest for the United States to secure energy independence and the Cold War relationship between Russia and satellite states regarding oil and gas exports.[1] Since the oil crises, energy diplomacy has mainly focused on the securitization of energy supplies on a country or bloc basis and on the foreign policy to obtain that energy security.[2][3]

Ontological relationship with national security, foreign policy, and energy security

Foreign politics has been around for thousands of years of our civilization, while energy has only entered in the last 150 years. However, in that period foreign policy and energy have had an increasing number of overlapping and interconnected elements. Foreign policy in its own part is closely linked and dependent on the concept of national security. National security is a principle of actions governing relations of one state with others based on geography, external threats and other national security challenges, of which energy is one.[4]

The three concepts, national security, foreign policy and energy security are ontologically structured, where national security is the most general concept, foreign policy is one level lower covering the international aspect of national security risks, and the lowest on the scale is energy diplomacy. Foreign policy is linked to national security as it is the tool which implements overall national security. National security also has a direct link to energy diplomacy. National security denotes the capability of a nation to overcome its internal and external multi-dimensional threats by balancing all instruments of state policy through governance.[5] It aims to protect national independence, security and territorial, political and economic integrity, dealing with a large number of national security risks.[4]

Energy is one of the fundamental items on the national security agenda. National security that deals with such external issues and risks is applied and implemented by government departments for external relations. Implementation of the national security strategy involving external factors and international issues is carried out through foreign policy instruments, namely international relations and diplomacy. Energy diplomacy specifically focuses on external energy relations. Despite the ontological hierarchy of the three concepts, it is a recurring theme for them to continuously intersect in practical diplomatic life and the geopolitical reality.[4]

History

The beginning of the 20th century was the early era of energy diplomacy, which was largely marked by corporate players. Such diplomacy was dominated by the corporations that produced and distributed fossil fuel, rather than sovereign governments, as in the case of Royal Dutch Shell and Standard Oil. National security on a national level as a concept in its own right had not yet been formulated, but the energy issues were increasing in importance. Carving up the global oil reserves and markets was carried out persistently, alike during the 1908 negotiations between Royal Dutch Shell head Deterding and the US Standard Oil director Teagle; or on the occasion of signing the US “As-Is” Pool Association agreement in 1928.[6] The corporations were competing and racing over privileges, quotas and allocations.[7] The governments were not too far behind, supporting them and often facilitating the race, but the influential corporations dominantly shaped the industry and foreign policy.[4]

The Post World War II era experienced fall of empires, rise of colonies, global shifts in geopolitical influence of UK, US, Russia and others. It is the OPEC that has succeeded in the 1960s and 1970s to gain ground in relation to the international oil corporations,[8] nationalizing and regaining control over the national fossil fuel resources in several large producing countries. The oil shocks after WWII were the ones that greatly contributed to the growth of security concerns and diplomatic efforts in the energy sphere. The most important occurrences were the Suez Crisis of 1956-1957[6] and the OPEC oil embargo of 1973–1974. Whole economies were brought near to a standstill, escalating energy issues as top security concerns.[4]

Soon came other disruptions, albeit smaller, caused by the Iranian revolution of 1979, the Iran-Iraq War of 1980 followed by the first Persian Gulf War in 1990–1991. Turbulences on the oil market that disturbed and endangered economies were also caused by the 2003 Iraq invasion, oil price spike of 2007-2008, Russian Ukrainian gas dispute in 2009,[9] and others[10] including smaller disruptions. Oil passages are still a global security concern as 40% of all oil transits via four conduits of the straits of Hormuz, Malacca, Rab-el-Mandeb and the Suez Canal. International Energy Agency (IEA) expects that these quantities will rise from 40% to 60% by 2030.[11] Any longer interruption would cause another large-scale economic downfall.[4]

Therefore, energy diplomacy has entered the domain of foreign policy through the national security passageway. Numerous grave national and international risks associated with energy security and energy diplomacy have paved this way and assured that energy is viewed and judged as a security concern, so it acquired all the features of a security issue, and is constantly monitored for level of risk, potential prevention or intervention in the diplomatic field.[4]

Next to the security path, energy concerns have entered foreign policy considerations via another path, the economy.[4] A valid example is Australia,[12] which has in 2018 decided to form a new policy body titled energy diplomacy. Australia, being by far the largest global exporter of coal, has only been mildly affected by the shifts on the market and geopolitics of energy, so its security risk concerning energy has not been very high.[4]

The rise of energy risks and main issues

Energy diplomacy is a growing diplomatic field, aimed at providing energy security. Energy has entered the sphere of diplomacy and foreign policy as a result of its rising impact on national security and economy. Energy, the ability to do any work, powers the economy. Its uninterrupted flow, inward for importing countries, and outward for exporting, must be secured at all times. Until the last few decades of the 20th century the question of energy was not treated as a matter of such urgency nor geopolitics. The availability, affordability and supply were not a security issue. The industrial production and consumption capacities were smaller, and movement of energy was generally safe and dependable. Throughout the industrial revolution the increasing need for energy grew at a remarkable pace, spiraling in the 20th century. Only in the last 50 years, between 1971 and 2017[13] world total primary energy supply grew by more than 250% from 5, 519 Mtoe to 13, 972 Mtoe. Energy use worldwide is yet to grow by one-third until 2040.[14][4]

The changed situation generated a series of factors that required energy security and energy diplomacy to be elevated onto the national security agenda. National security departments worldwide closely monitor the severe escalation of energy use. The modern consumer and the contemporary economy have gradually grown to critically depend on energy. Hence, economy and energy have become inseparable concepts. Energy has become a synonym for the economy and power, and not having enough of it became a concern of the utmost national security. Access to energy resources has decided on war outcomes, security of supply shaped national and international agendas, oil and gas producing countries organized together into coalitions, tapping into the newly discovered energy resources to back their political and geopolitical goals. Oil and gas companies became some of the most influential organizations in the global business and power-influencing arena.[15] Oil price volatility caused by oil shocks spelled economic fortunes or disasters for many participants in the international arena affecting national and geopolitical strategies. The economic consequences were considerable, so energy had to be included on the list of security and foreign policy issues of states.[4]

Nature of energy diplomacy

Energy diplomacy refers to diplomatic activities designed to enhance access to energy resources and markets.[16] It is a system of influencing the policies, resolutions and conduct of foreign governments and other international factors by means of diplomatic dialogue, negotiation, lobbying, advocacy and other peaceful methods. The general relationship between foreign policy and energy diplomacy is conceptually one of principal and agent. Foreign policy sets the goals and overall political strategy while energy diplomacy is a mechanism for achieving the goals. Energy diplomacy is an instrument of foreign policy. The purpose of energy diplomacy is to safeguard economic and energy security. Energy diplomacy channels economic and trade relations of a state with other states and organizations safeguarding Energy security through availability, reliability and affordability.[4]

Diplomatic efforts aimed at providing energy security grew in importance and complexity. It matured and spun off from general foreign policy and public diplomacy into a separate diplomatic niche field,[17] energy diplomacy, mostly after the 1970s oil crises. This diplomatic activity has several other popular names like "geopetroleum politics",[18] or "petro–politics" (Dorraj and Currier, 2011),[19] or pipeline diplomacy (Aalto, 2008), but it mostly covers the same field. Energy diplomacy has developed its own programs, goals, instruments, tactics and action plans, such as the European Union Energy Diplomacy Action Plan.[4]

Thus, at the institutional level, energy diplomacy typically focuses on such topics as targets and guidelines; regulations and energy saving; the development of nuclear energy; research and development and demonstration; oil sharing;[2] energy transportation; energy exploration; energy early warning and response; and, in the context of global warming, energy sustainability and energy transition for hydrocarbon exporting states.[20][21] Commercial energy diplomacy, a hybrid of commercial diplomacy and energy diplomacy, involves political support for foreign-investing energy businesses.[22]

Energy diplomacy employs foreign policy methods to ensure a steady flow of energy and security of energy supplies. Energy producing and energy consuming countries apply them differently. Energy producing states mostly focus on using energy diplomacy to expand their exports and presence on the global markets. The example is the energy diplomacy of an exporting state, Russia, who aims to secure access to buyers for oil and gas. It is similar with the energy diplomacy of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), whose focus is similarly export and keeping external demand. Energy consuming and importing states apply energy diplomacy to secure energy supplies and steady inflow, like China's oil diplomacy in Africa or more recently, with Iran.[23] There are also hybrid strategies, which are retained by states that are both large consumers and producers; such are India[24] and the United States.[4]

Energy diplomacy and the energy transition

Although the integration of energy diplomacy into foreign policy for some states has been security and the others economy, the energy transition is reshaping those dynamics so that questions of security and economy will follow a new geopolitical reality. The dynamics of the relationship with foreign policy and national security is thus undergoing a fundamental change—energy transition. Providing energy security has traditionally included several key notions: availability, reliability and affordability,[25] but in the past two decades another crucial aspect is added – environmental sustainability and transition to low carbon energy.[4]

This has initiated a huge shift in how energy is perceived, its toll on the environment and it prompted policies to curb climate change. It was spearheaded by policy makers in the EU.[26] With the proliferation of more renewable energy in the energy mix, like solar, tidal, energy efficiency, wind or water, the geography of resources will not be limited to only a few resource rich countries, but much more evenly spread throughout the world. The way national energy risks are perceived is gradually changing, as energy availability will be significantly improved and more prevalent all over the planet. The energy transition into low carbon energy is already shaping the dynamic relationship of geopolitics, national security strategies, foreign policies and energy diplomacy.[4] Various scholars argue that renewable energy may cause more small-scale conflicts but reduce the risk of large conflicts between states.[27][28]

Energy diplomacy by country or bloc

Arab states of the Persian Gulf

Hydrocarbon exporting states in the Persian Gulf, such as those of the Gulf Cooperation Council, traditionally reliant on oil export and often members of OPEC, are increasingly seeking bilateral relations which enable their ability to conduct an energy transition from fossil fuels to energy sustainability, including renewable energy and nuclear power.[21]

Australia

Australia is considered an energy superpower. Its energy diplomacy focuses primarily on promoting fossil fuels, primarily coal, and securing export markets for them.[12]

European Union

While the European Union's internal energy policy may be seen as an example of energy diplomacy between the member states,[29] the European Union has been developing external energy policy over the past two decades,[30][3][22][31] via its EU Energy Diplomacy Action Plan, most notably with regard to Russia,[32][33][34][35] Africa,[36][37] and Eurasia,[38] including across the Caspian basin.[39][40]

People's Republic of China

The country on which much of the energy diplomacy literature has focused is China, due to its management of its fundamental energy insecurity,[41][20] for instance in the relationship between national and corporate interests,[42] as in its gas supply and infrastructure.[43] China faces an energy supply deficit by 2030, and its energy diplomacy is guided by the strategic need to secure sufficient gas and oil supplies by this time.[44] Given this situation, it first aggressively attempted application of the 'Beijing Consensus' to other countries via energy diplomacy, such as the BRICS bloc countries.[45]

China's energy diplomacy has covered a plethora of countries, such as, in the early years, Turkey,[46] and in later years the Middle East and North Africa,[47] with special regard to the Iran and Saudi Arabia conflict, where China's role in peace-building came under scrutiny.[48][49] China's energy diplomacy with South American countries such as Brazil is an issue,[50] as is its relationship with Russia, which can be examined at the levels of personalism and institutionalism.[51]

At the heart of China's energy diplomacy as regards the West and indeed the world is the issue of whether China's struggle for energy security will result in energy diplomacy behavior normalization through economic interdependence or whether China will continue to practice resource neo-mercantilism and power politics.[52] Global energy governance institutions such as the International Energy Agency continue to look for responsible domestic energy governance from China, while China has switched attention from trying to impose its leadership on BRICS to developing its own "Silk Road Economic Belt", in part via the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, as a means to obtain energy imports.[45]

Russia

Russian energy diplomacy is mainly focused on its relationship with Europe,[2][3][35] especially over natural gas supply,[33][32][53][34] including across Eurasia,[54] and Russia has combined energy supply with cyber and maritime power as policy instruments.[55] Russia also pursues nuclear energy diplomacy, for instance with Finland and Hungary, via Rosatom.[56]

United States

United States (US) energy diplomacy has consistently focused on oil, and more recently on the oil and gas boom, and is coordinated by the Bureau of Energy Resources at the Department of State.[57] Its commercial energy diplomacy interests extend widely, beyond the traditional Middle East oil exporters to Central Asian countries such as Kazakhstan.[58] Historically, the US has exported nuclear energy reactors,[59] by building on its Atoms for Peace program exporting research reactors.[60]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Abelson, P.H. (1976), Energy diplomacy. Science, 192(4238), 429.
  • Chi Zhang (2016), The Domestic Dynamics Of China's Energy Diplomacy, World Scientific Publishing Co.
  • Maness, R., Valeriano, B. (2015), Russia's Coercive Diplomacy: Energy, Cyber, and Maritime Policy as New Sources of Power, Palgrave Macmillan.

External links

  • United Nations Sustainable Energy Diplomacy (page)

energy, diplomacy, form, diplomacy, subfield, international, relations, closely, related, principal, foreign, policy, overall, national, security, specifically, energy, security, began, first, half, twentieth, century, emerged, term, during, second, crisis, me. Energy diplomacy is a form of diplomacy and a subfield of international relations It is closely related to its principal foreign policy and to overall national security specifically energy security Energy diplomacy began in the first half of the twentieth century and emerged as a term during the second oil crisis as a means of describing OPEC s actions It has since mainly focused on the securitization of energy supplies primarily fossil fuels but also nuclear energy and increasingly sustainable energy on a country or bloc basis Contents 1 Background 2 Ontological relationship with national security foreign policy and energy security 3 History 4 The rise of energy risks and main issues 5 Nature of energy diplomacy 6 Energy diplomacy and the energy transition 7 Energy diplomacy by country or bloc 7 1 Arab states of the Persian Gulf 7 2 Australia 7 3 European Union 7 4 People s Republic of China 7 5 Russia 7 6 United States 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground EditEnergy diplomacy emerged as a term during the second oil crisis as a means of describing OPEC s actions and of characterizing the quest for the United States to secure energy independence and the Cold War relationship between Russia and satellite states regarding oil and gas exports 1 Since the oil crises energy diplomacy has mainly focused on the securitization of energy supplies on a country or bloc basis and on the foreign policy to obtain that energy security 2 3 Ontological relationship with national security foreign policy and energy security EditForeign politics has been around for thousands of years of our civilization while energy has only entered in the last 150 years However in that period foreign policy and energy have had an increasing number of overlapping and interconnected elements Foreign policy in its own part is closely linked and dependent on the concept of national security National security is a principle of actions governing relations of one state with others based on geography external threats and other national security challenges of which energy is one 4 The three concepts national security foreign policy and energy security are ontologically structured where national security is the most general concept foreign policy is one level lower covering the international aspect of national security risks and the lowest on the scale is energy diplomacy Foreign policy is linked to national security as it is the tool which implements overall national security National security also has a direct link to energy diplomacy National security denotes the capability of a nation to overcome its internal and external multi dimensional threats by balancing all instruments of state policy through governance 5 It aims to protect national independence security and territorial political and economic integrity dealing with a large number of national security risks 4 Energy is one of the fundamental items on the national security agenda National security that deals with such external issues and risks is applied and implemented by government departments for external relations Implementation of the national security strategy involving external factors and international issues is carried out through foreign policy instruments namely international relations and diplomacy Energy diplomacy specifically focuses on external energy relations Despite the ontological hierarchy of the three concepts it is a recurring theme for them to continuously intersect in practical diplomatic life and the geopolitical reality 4 History EditThe beginning of the 20th century was the early era of energy diplomacy which was largely marked by corporate players Such diplomacy was dominated by the corporations that produced and distributed fossil fuel rather than sovereign governments as in the case of Royal Dutch Shell and Standard Oil National security on a national level as a concept in its own right had not yet been formulated but the energy issues were increasing in importance Carving up the global oil reserves and markets was carried out persistently alike during the 1908 negotiations between Royal Dutch Shell head Deterding and the US Standard Oil director Teagle or on the occasion of signing the US As Is Pool Association agreement in 1928 6 The corporations were competing and racing over privileges quotas and allocations 7 The governments were not too far behind supporting them and often facilitating the race but the influential corporations dominantly shaped the industry and foreign policy 4 The Post World War II era experienced fall of empires rise of colonies global shifts in geopolitical influence of UK US Russia and others It is the OPEC that has succeeded in the 1960s and 1970s to gain ground in relation to the international oil corporations 8 nationalizing and regaining control over the national fossil fuel resources in several large producing countries The oil shocks after WWII were the ones that greatly contributed to the growth of security concerns and diplomatic efforts in the energy sphere The most important occurrences were the Suez Crisis of 1956 1957 6 and the OPEC oil embargo of 1973 1974 Whole economies were brought near to a standstill escalating energy issues as top security concerns 4 Soon came other disruptions albeit smaller caused by the Iranian revolution of 1979 the Iran Iraq War of 1980 followed by the first Persian Gulf War in 1990 1991 Turbulences on the oil market that disturbed and endangered economies were also caused by the 2003 Iraq invasion oil price spike of 2007 2008 Russian Ukrainian gas dispute in 2009 9 and others 10 including smaller disruptions Oil passages are still a global security concern as 40 of all oil transits via four conduits of the straits of Hormuz Malacca Rab el Mandeb and the Suez Canal International Energy Agency IEA expects that these quantities will rise from 40 to 60 by 2030 11 Any longer interruption would cause another large scale economic downfall 4 Therefore energy diplomacy has entered the domain of foreign policy through the national security passageway Numerous grave national and international risks associated with energy security and energy diplomacy have paved this way and assured that energy is viewed and judged as a security concern so it acquired all the features of a security issue and is constantly monitored for level of risk potential prevention or intervention in the diplomatic field 4 Next to the security path energy concerns have entered foreign policy considerations via another path the economy 4 A valid example is Australia 12 which has in 2018 decided to form a new policy body titled energy diplomacy Australia being by far the largest global exporter of coal has only been mildly affected by the shifts on the market and geopolitics of energy so its security risk concerning energy has not been very high 4 The rise of energy risks and main issues EditEnergy diplomacy is a growing diplomatic field aimed at providing energy security Energy has entered the sphere of diplomacy and foreign policy as a result of its rising impact on national security and economy Energy the ability to do any work powers the economy Its uninterrupted flow inward for importing countries and outward for exporting must be secured at all times Until the last few decades of the 20th century the question of energy was not treated as a matter of such urgency nor geopolitics The availability affordability and supply were not a security issue The industrial production and consumption capacities were smaller and movement of energy was generally safe and dependable Throughout the industrial revolution the increasing need for energy grew at a remarkable pace spiraling in the 20th century Only in the last 50 years between 1971 and 2017 13 world total primary energy supply grew by more than 250 from 5 519 Mtoe to 13 972 Mtoe Energy use worldwide is yet to grow by one third until 2040 14 4 The changed situation generated a series of factors that required energy security and energy diplomacy to be elevated onto the national security agenda National security departments worldwide closely monitor the severe escalation of energy use The modern consumer and the contemporary economy have gradually grown to critically depend on energy Hence economy and energy have become inseparable concepts Energy has become a synonym for the economy and power and not having enough of it became a concern of the utmost national security Access to energy resources has decided on war outcomes security of supply shaped national and international agendas oil and gas producing countries organized together into coalitions tapping into the newly discovered energy resources to back their political and geopolitical goals Oil and gas companies became some of the most influential organizations in the global business and power influencing arena 15 Oil price volatility caused by oil shocks spelled economic fortunes or disasters for many participants in the international arena affecting national and geopolitical strategies The economic consequences were considerable so energy had to be included on the list of security and foreign policy issues of states 4 Nature of energy diplomacy EditEnergy diplomacy refers to diplomatic activities designed to enhance access to energy resources and markets 16 It is a system of influencing the policies resolutions and conduct of foreign governments and other international factors by means of diplomatic dialogue negotiation lobbying advocacy and other peaceful methods The general relationship between foreign policy and energy diplomacy is conceptually one of principal and agent Foreign policy sets the goals and overall political strategy while energy diplomacy is a mechanism for achieving the goals Energy diplomacy is an instrument of foreign policy The purpose of energy diplomacy is to safeguard economic and energy security Energy diplomacy channels economic and trade relations of a state with other states and organizations safeguarding Energy security through availability reliability and affordability 4 Diplomatic efforts aimed at providing energy security grew in importance and complexity It matured and spun off from general foreign policy and public diplomacy into a separate diplomatic niche field 17 energy diplomacy mostly after the 1970s oil crises This diplomatic activity has several other popular names like geopetroleum politics 18 or petro politics Dorraj and Currier 2011 19 or pipeline diplomacy Aalto 2008 but it mostly covers the same field Energy diplomacy has developed its own programs goals instruments tactics and action plans such as the European Union Energy Diplomacy Action Plan 4 Thus at the institutional level energy diplomacy typically focuses on such topics as targets and guidelines regulations and energy saving the development of nuclear energy research and development and demonstration oil sharing 2 energy transportation energy exploration energy early warning and response and in the context of global warming energy sustainability and energy transition for hydrocarbon exporting states 20 21 Commercial energy diplomacy a hybrid of commercial diplomacy and energy diplomacy involves political support for foreign investing energy businesses 22 Energy diplomacy employs foreign policy methods to ensure a steady flow of energy and security of energy supplies Energy producing and energy consuming countries apply them differently Energy producing states mostly focus on using energy diplomacy to expand their exports and presence on the global markets The example is the energy diplomacy of an exporting state Russia who aims to secure access to buyers for oil and gas It is similar with the energy diplomacy of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries OPEC whose focus is similarly export and keeping external demand Energy consuming and importing states apply energy diplomacy to secure energy supplies and steady inflow like China s oil diplomacy in Africa or more recently with Iran 23 There are also hybrid strategies which are retained by states that are both large consumers and producers such are India 24 and the United States 4 Energy diplomacy and the energy transition EditAlthough the integration of energy diplomacy into foreign policy for some states has been security and the others economy the energy transition is reshaping those dynamics so that questions of security and economy will follow a new geopolitical reality The dynamics of the relationship with foreign policy and national security is thus undergoing a fundamental change energy transition Providing energy security has traditionally included several key notions availability reliability and affordability 25 but in the past two decades another crucial aspect is added environmental sustainability and transition to low carbon energy 4 This has initiated a huge shift in how energy is perceived its toll on the environment and it prompted policies to curb climate change It was spearheaded by policy makers in the EU 26 With the proliferation of more renewable energy in the energy mix like solar tidal energy efficiency wind or water the geography of resources will not be limited to only a few resource rich countries but much more evenly spread throughout the world The way national energy risks are perceived is gradually changing as energy availability will be significantly improved and more prevalent all over the planet The energy transition into low carbon energy is already shaping the dynamic relationship of geopolitics national security strategies foreign policies and energy diplomacy 4 Various scholars argue that renewable energy may cause more small scale conflicts but reduce the risk of large conflicts between states 27 28 Energy diplomacy by country or bloc EditArab states of the Persian Gulf Edit Hydrocarbon exporting states in the Persian Gulf such as those of the Gulf Cooperation Council traditionally reliant on oil export and often members of OPEC are increasingly seeking bilateral relations which enable their ability to conduct an energy transition from fossil fuels to energy sustainability including renewable energy and nuclear power 21 Australia Edit Main article Energy policy of Australia Australia is considered an energy superpower Its energy diplomacy focuses primarily on promoting fossil fuels primarily coal and securing export markets for them 12 European Union Edit Main article Energy policy of the European Union While the European Union s internal energy policy may be seen as an example of energy diplomacy between the member states 29 the European Union has been developing external energy policy over the past two decades 30 3 22 31 via its EU Energy Diplomacy Action Plan most notably with regard to Russia 32 33 34 35 Africa 36 37 and Eurasia 38 including across the Caspian basin 39 40 People s Republic of China Edit Main article Energy security of the People s Republic of China The country on which much of the energy diplomacy literature has focused is China due to its management of its fundamental energy insecurity 41 20 for instance in the relationship between national and corporate interests 42 as in its gas supply and infrastructure 43 China faces an energy supply deficit by 2030 and its energy diplomacy is guided by the strategic need to secure sufficient gas and oil supplies by this time 44 Given this situation it first aggressively attempted application of the Beijing Consensus to other countries via energy diplomacy such as the BRICS bloc countries 45 China s energy diplomacy has covered a plethora of countries such as in the early years Turkey 46 and in later years the Middle East and North Africa 47 with special regard to the Iran and Saudi Arabia conflict where China s role in peace building came under scrutiny 48 49 China s energy diplomacy with South American countries such as Brazil is an issue 50 as is its relationship with Russia which can be examined at the levels of personalism and institutionalism 51 At the heart of China s energy diplomacy as regards the West and indeed the world is the issue of whether China s struggle for energy security will result in energy diplomacy behavior normalization through economic interdependence or whether China will continue to practice resource neo mercantilism and power politics 52 Global energy governance institutions such as the International Energy Agency continue to look for responsible domestic energy governance from China while China has switched attention from trying to impose its leadership on BRICS to developing its own Silk Road Economic Belt in part via the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation as a means to obtain energy imports 45 Russia Edit Main article Energy policy of Russia Energy in foreign policy Russian energy diplomacy is mainly focused on its relationship with Europe 2 3 35 especially over natural gas supply 33 32 53 34 including across Eurasia 54 and Russia has combined energy supply with cyber and maritime power as policy instruments 55 Russia also pursues nuclear energy diplomacy for instance with Finland and Hungary via Rosatom 56 United States Edit Main article Energy policy of the United States United States US energy diplomacy has consistently focused on oil and more recently on the oil and gas boom and is coordinated by the Bureau of Energy Resources at the Department of State 57 Its commercial energy diplomacy interests extend widely beyond the traditional Middle East oil exporters to Central Asian countries such as Kazakhstan 58 Historically the US has exported nuclear energy reactors 59 by building on its Atoms for Peace program exporting research reactors 60 See also Edit1973 oil crisis 1979 oil crisis 2000s energy crisis Energy policy Energy security Energy superpower Gulf War International Energy Agency ITER OPEC Suez crisis Commercial diplomacy Medical diplomacy Public diplomacy Defence diplomacyReferences Edit Abelson P H 30 April 1976 Energy 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9781118991978 hces203 hdl 11250 2451749 ISBN 978 1 118 99197 8 China s Quest for Energy Security in the Middle East Strategic Implications China s Energy Relations with the Developing World Bloomsbury Academic 2011 doi 10 5040 9781501300905 ch 004 ISBN 978 1 4411 7555 7 a b Liu Zhenya Electric power and energy in China ISBN 978 1 118 71659 5 OCLC 843228804 a b Griffiths Steven November 2019 Energy diplomacy in a time of energy transition Energy Strategy Reviews 26 100386 doi 10 1016 j esr 2019 100386 a b Stoddard Edward 20 July 2017 Tough times shifting roles examining the EU s commercial diplomacy in foreign energy markets Journal of European Public Policy 24 7 1048 1068 doi 10 1080 13501763 2016 1170190 S2CID 156087171 Will China Russia Defy U S Sanctions To Fund Iranian Oil Projects OilPrice Retrieved 2020 08 17 IEA Energy Atlas IEA Retrieved 2020 08 17 Elkind Jonathan Pascual Carlos 2009 Energy Security Economics Politics Strategies and Implications Brookings Institution Press ISBN 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1520601 S2CID 158115925 Barra Matteo Svec Martin June 2018 Reinforcing Energy Governance under the EU Energy Diplomacy A Proposal for Strengthening Energy Frameworks in Africa European Journal of Risk Regulation 9 2 245 267 doi 10 1017 err 2018 14 S2CID 158880415 Proedrou Filippos 3 April 2019 Unpacking EU external energy governance vis a vis Egypt contradictions geopolitics and Euro centrism Journal of Contemporary European Studies 27 2 224 236 doi 10 1080 14782804 2019 1597688 S2CID 159226474 Bocse Alexandra Maria January 2019 EU Energy Diplomacy Searching for New Suppliers in Azerbaijan and Iran Geopolitics 24 1 145 173 doi 10 1080 14650045 2018 1477755 S2CID 150098471 Zhiltsov Sergey S 2015 EU Policy in Shaping the Pipeline Architecture in the Caspian Region Oil and Gas Pipelines in the Black Caspian Seas Region The Handbook of Environmental Chemistry Vol 51 pp 95 103 doi 10 1007 698 2015 383 ISBN 978 3 319 43906 8 Finon Dominique March 2011 The EU foreign gas policy of transit 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China s Global Energy Diplomacy Behavior Normalization Through Economic Interdependence or Resource Neo mercantilism and Power Politics Journal of Chinese Political Science 21 2 217 240 doi 10 1007 s11366 016 9405 3 S2CID 156696589 Chun Hongchan June 2009 Russia s energy diplomacy toward Europe and Northeast Asia a comparative study Asia Europe Journal 7 2 327 343 doi 10 1007 s10308 008 0206 y S2CID 154028925 Stulberg Adam N December 2012 Strategic bargaining and pipeline politics Confronting the credible commitment problem in Eurasian energy transit Review of International Political Economy 19 5 808 836 doi 10 1080 09692290 2011 603662 S2CID 154982654 Maness Ryan C 2015 Russia s Coercive Diplomacy Energy Cyber and Maritime Policy as New Sources of Power ISBN 978 1 137 47944 0 OCLC 1170596729 Aalto Pami Nyyssonen Heino Kojo Matti Pal Pallavi 4 July 2017 Russian nuclear energy diplomacy in Finland and Hungary Eurasian Geography and Economics 58 4 386 417 doi 10 1080 15387216 2017 1396905 S2CID 158938159 Boersma Tim Johnson Corey 2018 U S Energy Diplomacy PDF New York Center on Global Energy Policy Almadiev Bekbolat Nugumanova Karlygash Ismailova Diana 1 September 2015 Development and Use of Policy Instruments and Tools for Effective Energy Diplomacy of the Republic of Kazakhstan and the United States Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences doi 10 5901 mjss 2015 v6n5s2p336 DiChristopher Tom 21 March 2019 The US is losing the nuclear energy export race to China and Russia Here s the Trump team s plan to turn the tide CNBC 60 Years of Atoms for Peace Nuclear Engineering International www neimagazine com Retrieved 2020 08 17 Further reading EditAbelson P H 1976 Energy diplomacy Science 192 4238 429 Chi Zhang 2016 The Domestic Dynamics Of China s Energy Diplomacy World Scientific Publishing Co Maness R Valeriano B 2015 Russia s Coercive Diplomacy Energy Cyber and Maritime Policy as New Sources of Power Palgrave Macmillan External links EditUnited Nations Sustainable Energy Diplomacy page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Energy diplomacy amp oldid 1113299004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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