Journal article
The New Energy Order: Managing Insecurities in the 21st Century.
- Abstract:
- The last decade has seen an extraordinary shift in expectations for the world energy system. After a long era of excess capacity, since 2001, prices for oil and most energy commodities have risen sharply and become more volatile. Easy-to-tap local fuel supplies have run short, forcing major energy consumers to depend on longer and seemingly more fragile supply chains. Prices have yo-yoed over the last 18 months: first reaching all-time highs, then dropping by two-thirds, and after that rising back up to surprisingly high levels given the continuing weakness of the global economy. The troubles extend far beyond oil. Governments in regions such as Europe worry about insecure supplies of natural gas. India, among others, is poised to depend heavily on coal imports in the coming decades. For these reasons, governments in nearly all the large consuming nations are now besieged by doubts about their energy security like at no time since the oil crises of the 1970s. Meanwhile, the biggest energy suppliers are questioning whether demand is certain enough to justify the big investments needed to develop new capacity. Producers and consumers, each group unsure of the other, cannot agree on how best to finance and manage a more secure energy system.
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Authors
- Publisher:
- Council on Foreign Relations
- Journal:
- Foreign Affairs More from this journal
- Volume:
- 89
- Issue:
- 1
- Pages:
- 61 - 73
- Publication date:
- 2010-01-01
- Language:
-
English
- UUID:
-
uuid:04cca381-bd86-4a59-97cc-4eae2f9ffe5d
- Local pid:
-
oai:economics.ouls.ox.ac.uk:14679
- Deposit date:
-
2011-08-16
- ARK identifier:
Terms of use
- Copyright date:
- 2010
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