My colleague Iain Grant of the University of Athabasca, Alberta Canada and I, Jose Marroquin, will discuss the important topic of energy security and geopolitics. Please join us in beautiful Perth Australia for the second annual IAEE Asian Conference. Here's an excerpt of what we plan to speak about:
‘Energy Security’ could be the most oft-used term in our current political-economic lexicon, but it could also be the most poorly defined. Frequently appearing in close company with another notorious vagary – geopolitics – energy security has come to mean all things at once, a conceptual pathology that usually leads terms to mean very little at all. This paper seeks to remedy this problem, and makes three main points.
First, a reinvention of the term has come about because the traditional, economistic view of energy security has had a less articulate, underdeveloped ‘geopolitical’ view forced upon it. The latter view is less informed because its field of origin – International Relations –
has paid surprisingly little attention to the relationship between the energy trade and international politics, and its treatment of this
relationship is still in its very early stages.
Second, in the absence of a more developed integration of the ecomomistic and the geopolitical treatments of energy security, careless
use of the
term risks the development of heavy-handed policies that could, at best, impede mutal confidence-building measures and, at
worst, undermine those
aspects of cooperation long visible in international energy relations. |