Reconceptualising energy security : business perspectives on energy security in the Norwegian and Russian Arctic ...
Despite the global importance of energy security as a concept that shapes national and international energy policymaking, it lacks clarity and is open to interpretation (Alhajji 2008, Azzuni & Breyer, 2017). Conventional supply-focused approaches to energy security have been criticised for faili...
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | unknown |
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The University of St Andrews
2020
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Online Access: | https://dx.doi.org/10.17630/sta/988 https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/handle/10023/30156 |
Summary: | Despite the global importance of energy security as a concept that shapes national and international energy policymaking, it lacks clarity and is open to interpretation (Alhajji 2008, Azzuni & Breyer, 2017). Conventional supply-focused approaches to energy security have been criticised for failing to account for a multitude of actors and challenges faced by the energy industry and energy consumers globally. A growing number of authors have reflected on the need for a more comprehensive approach to energy security that incorporates risks across the whole energy system (rather than focusing on supply only) and a multitude of adjacent dimensions (see Hippel et al 2009, Vivoda 2010, Elkind 2010, Mitchell and Watson 2013, Cherp & Jewell 2014). However, this literature still approaches energy security from a state perspective ignoring the role of non-state actors. This thesis seeks to bridge this gap by exploring risk perceptions of energy companies – arguably the key actors of energy systems – involved in ... |
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