The EU and energy security

This paper evaluates the current energy climate, with special reference to the EU, with the present energy arena defined by several key characteristics; high oil prices, the increasing dependence of the EU on imported energy, the increasing politicisation of energy, the growing demand of Asia, and t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rubbi-Clarke, Jamie P. (Dissertant)
Other Authors: Dančák, Břetislav, 1973- (Thesis advisor)
Format: Thesis Manuscript
Language:English
Published: 2006.
Subjects:
Online Access:http://is.muni.cz/th/165788/fss_m/
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Summary:This paper evaluates the current energy climate, with special reference to the EU, with the present energy arena defined by several key characteristics; high oil prices, the increasing dependence of the EU on imported energy, the increasing politicisation of energy, the growing demand of Asia, and the constant uncertainty surrounding many key producers and transit countries. It argues that the EU needs to produce a common energy policy, in order to maximise its leverage, a policy that should be uniting, not divisive, which should use its burgeoning foreign and security policy to help stabilise producer regions, and look further than the current reliance on oil and gas technologies. Several recommendations are produced, for different actors in the energy security arena, but perhaps mostly aimed in the direction of Brussels.
Item Description:Vedoucí práce: Břetislav Dančák.
Physical Description:91 l. , [2] l. příl. : tab. , graf.