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http://t.co/5GFOlI54 - Borrell forced to resign over energy interests | European Voice via @EuropeanVoiceEV
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- Brand new piece: From the State to the Market and Back. Policy Implications of Changing Energy Paradigms
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- New book addresses key dynamics of energy governance in Europe and Russia
- Unaddressed “side effects” of the shale gas revolution bear risks for European energy security
- The costs to the West of war with Iran would pale compared to the costs to the developing world
- New policy report discusses challenges and opportunities for transatlantic energy cooperation
- A public policy perspective on global energy security offers new routes of research
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New book addresses key dynamics of energy governance in Europe and Russia
A newly released book addresses key issues in Eurasian energy governance. Published with Palgrave Macmillan, the volume seeks to analyze contemporary transition processes in the region’s energy sector. Read more.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged energy policy, energy security, Europe, Global energy governance, Russia
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Unaddressed “side effects” of the shale gas revolution bear risks for European energy security
My recent study on The Impact of Shale Gas on European Energy Security argues that the current ‘shale gas revolution’ comes with a number of risks requiring policy solutions, including investment uncertainty, cartelization of gas markets and price volatility. Learn … Continue reading
The costs to the West of war with Iran would pale compared to the costs to the developing world
My OpEd article in European Voice titled The Costs to the West – And the Rest argues that the fallout of conflict with Iran, a major oil producer, would almost exclusively punish the developing world, not economically advanced nations. Learn … Continue reading
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New policy report discusses challenges and opportunities for transatlantic energy cooperation
A new GPPi/ Brookings report titled Addressing Carbon Emissions and Oil Price Volatility assesses transatlantic commonalities and dividing lines in two key energy issue areas: mitigating greenhouse gas emissions and governing the global oil market. Learn more.
A public policy perspective on global energy security offers new routes of research
My recent piece in International Studies Perspectives proposes market failure as an analytical justification of and as an intellectual foundation for further research in global energy governance, and sketches possible research agendas in that field. Learn more.
Collective action problems and the rise of new producers limit OPEC’s ability to control the oil market
A new piece I co-authored for a special edition of Global Policy assesses OPEC’s historic performance in global energy. It alsodiscusses key trends that are likely to determine OPEC’s effectiveness in the years ahead, particularly climate change policies. Learn more.
Emerging challenges in global oil governance relate to transparency and market uncertainty.
My recent contribution for the Routledge Handbook of Oil Politics (2011, ed. Robert Looney pp. 348-360) titles Challenges in Global Oil Governance. The piece argues that challenges in oil governance relate to a significant shift in global demand trends in oil … Continue reading