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Attempts at »multilateral governance« in international energy relations have faced
serious limitations on their efficiency as a consequence of geopolitics. The fact that
international energy policy is exercised in a tension between power-based geopolitics
and multilateral cooperative governance is even visible in the EU itself, the
biggest net importer of energy worldwide and a strong promoter of multilateral
governance in general but also of energy trade in particular.
The EU proposed a European strategy for sustainable, competitive, and secure
energy in March 2006. However, even internally this strategy has very limited
prospects of being implemented because of its already patchy record at the
member-state and eu levels. Its internal dimension already reveals a number of
weaknesses as member states still – even increasingly – define energy as a national
prerogative. Because energy security is a highly strategic issue, the idea of
»national champions« is gaining ground in the eu, contradicting a collective approach
to energy security. These limitations on multilateral governance already
faced at EU level are even more precarious on the global level where a shift can be
identified toward state-centered and power-based geopolitics driven by energy relations.
The reason for this lies in the ambiguous properties of energy which is
both a commodity and a strategic good, the geographical distribution of which
gives rise to geopolitics.
Nevertheless, there is a persistent demand for political cooperation in international
energy relations. The growing demand and the tight supply, as well as the
latter’s shifting geography, together with various transport issues, increasingly necessitate
forms of multilateral governance on which all parties can rely in order to
strive for more equitable and sustainable energy security and avoid conflicts over
energy. Moreover, the scarcity of hydrocarbons calls for a new, concerted, and profound
push to safe energy, to increase its efficient use, and to boost the share of
renewables in the energy mix worldwide.
In securing its energy supply the EU must pursue a role which is not in competition
with other consumers but based on cooperation and political dialog.
There is a strong argument that energy security is not divisible, but can only be
achieved collectively, also on the global level.
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