Russian fossil fuel production in the Arctic: implications for EU energy security

The EU-Russia energy relationship is a core aspect of their relationship, and one which has faced difficulties and tensions in recent years, characterized by mutual dependence of security of supply and security of demand. However, Russia has shown itself willing to use energy as a tool of foreign po...

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Main Author: Thompson, Evan William Edward
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Monash University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.4225/03/58a52d8ea8b3e
https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/thesis/Russian_fossil_fuel_production_in_the_Arctic_implications_for_EU_energy_security/4657903
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spelling ftdatacite:10.4225/03/58a52d8ea8b3e 2023-05-15T14:44:26+02:00 Russian fossil fuel production in the Arctic: implications for EU energy security Thompson, Evan William Edward 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.4225/03/58a52d8ea8b3e https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/thesis/Russian_fossil_fuel_production_in_the_Arctic_implications_for_EU_energy_security/4657903 unknown Monash University In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Uncategorized Text Thesis article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.4225/03/58a52d8ea8b3e 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The EU-Russia energy relationship is a core aspect of their relationship, and one which has faced difficulties and tensions in recent years, characterized by mutual dependence of security of supply and security of demand. However, Russia has shown itself willing to use energy as a tool of foreign policy, creating vulnerabilities for the EU and individual Member States’ energy security. In recent years, the Arctic has emerged as an increasingly important area of energy politics. The littoral states seek to expand their sovereignty over an extended continental shelf and the suspected 22% of remaining undiscovered oil and gas reserves to be found there. These dynamics encapsulate the nexus between the Arctic, energy security and climate change but have remained insufficiently analysed. This thesis has contributed to the body of knowledge by establishing whether Russian Arctic energy projects would be beneficial or detrimental to EU energy security, given the current relationship. Using Andrew Moravscik’s liberal preference formation theory, and Richard Sakwa’s characterization of the Russian government as a ‘dual state’, the thesis has adopted an approach to energy security analyses not seen in the literature. It conceives of the EU, its Member States, and Russia as actors whose interests change in accordance with the dominant preferences within their policy-making structures. Simultaneously, it highlights the vastly different decision-making structures in place within the EU and the Kremlin and the resultant discrepancies in policy-making and coherence on internal and external aspects of energy policy. The thesis demonstrates that whilst Russia pursues greater expansion of Arctic fossil fuel production, the EU is experiencing a dramatic change in its Internal Energy Market (IEM), with greater levels of competition, integration and a diversifying, less fossil-fuel dependent energy mix. It also points to an important trend in the Arctic of abiding by the terms of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and bilateral delimitations as evidence of a thus far peaceful evolution of Arctic politics, refuting some claims of a risky, potentially zero-sum approach. The thesis therefore argues that there exists some evidence to support the view of a more cooperative Russian pattern of behaviour emerging in the Arctic. In turn, this reduces the qualitative risk to EU energy security that Russia’s politicking represents and the quantitative concerns over future Russian production levels. Internal mechanisms led by the European Commission in areas of sustainability and competitiveness act to filter the negative impacts of Russian energy coercion, but it is where EU cohesiveness is yet to emerge, such as in external energy policy where the risks remain greatest. Contingent on intra-EU gains, and a more coherent EU-level approach to external energy policy, fostering sustained Russian involvement via Russian Arctic resources could be of benefit to the EU’s energy security. Therefore, the Russian Arctic will be important, just as Russia itself will remain a key supplier to the EU, especially for the eastern Member States. However, the defining feature by which EU energy security will be realised in coming years is the relative cohesiveness of the EU and its Member States combined. Thesis Arctic Climate change Law of the Sea DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Uncategorized
spellingShingle Uncategorized
Thompson, Evan William Edward
Russian fossil fuel production in the Arctic: implications for EU energy security
topic_facet Uncategorized
description The EU-Russia energy relationship is a core aspect of their relationship, and one which has faced difficulties and tensions in recent years, characterized by mutual dependence of security of supply and security of demand. However, Russia has shown itself willing to use energy as a tool of foreign policy, creating vulnerabilities for the EU and individual Member States’ energy security. In recent years, the Arctic has emerged as an increasingly important area of energy politics. The littoral states seek to expand their sovereignty over an extended continental shelf and the suspected 22% of remaining undiscovered oil and gas reserves to be found there. These dynamics encapsulate the nexus between the Arctic, energy security and climate change but have remained insufficiently analysed. This thesis has contributed to the body of knowledge by establishing whether Russian Arctic energy projects would be beneficial or detrimental to EU energy security, given the current relationship. Using Andrew Moravscik’s liberal preference formation theory, and Richard Sakwa’s characterization of the Russian government as a ‘dual state’, the thesis has adopted an approach to energy security analyses not seen in the literature. It conceives of the EU, its Member States, and Russia as actors whose interests change in accordance with the dominant preferences within their policy-making structures. Simultaneously, it highlights the vastly different decision-making structures in place within the EU and the Kremlin and the resultant discrepancies in policy-making and coherence on internal and external aspects of energy policy. The thesis demonstrates that whilst Russia pursues greater expansion of Arctic fossil fuel production, the EU is experiencing a dramatic change in its Internal Energy Market (IEM), with greater levels of competition, integration and a diversifying, less fossil-fuel dependent energy mix. It also points to an important trend in the Arctic of abiding by the terms of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and bilateral delimitations as evidence of a thus far peaceful evolution of Arctic politics, refuting some claims of a risky, potentially zero-sum approach. The thesis therefore argues that there exists some evidence to support the view of a more cooperative Russian pattern of behaviour emerging in the Arctic. In turn, this reduces the qualitative risk to EU energy security that Russia’s politicking represents and the quantitative concerns over future Russian production levels. Internal mechanisms led by the European Commission in areas of sustainability and competitiveness act to filter the negative impacts of Russian energy coercion, but it is where EU cohesiveness is yet to emerge, such as in external energy policy where the risks remain greatest. Contingent on intra-EU gains, and a more coherent EU-level approach to external energy policy, fostering sustained Russian involvement via Russian Arctic resources could be of benefit to the EU’s energy security. Therefore, the Russian Arctic will be important, just as Russia itself will remain a key supplier to the EU, especially for the eastern Member States. However, the defining feature by which EU energy security will be realised in coming years is the relative cohesiveness of the EU and its Member States combined.
format Thesis
author Thompson, Evan William Edward
author_facet Thompson, Evan William Edward
author_sort Thompson, Evan William Edward
title Russian fossil fuel production in the Arctic: implications for EU energy security
title_short Russian fossil fuel production in the Arctic: implications for EU energy security
title_full Russian fossil fuel production in the Arctic: implications for EU energy security
title_fullStr Russian fossil fuel production in the Arctic: implications for EU energy security
title_full_unstemmed Russian fossil fuel production in the Arctic: implications for EU energy security
title_sort russian fossil fuel production in the arctic: implications for eu energy security
publisher Monash University
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.4225/03/58a52d8ea8b3e
https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/thesis/Russian_fossil_fuel_production_in_the_Arctic_implications_for_EU_energy_security/4657903
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
Law of the Sea
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Law of the Sea
op_rights In Copyright
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.4225/03/58a52d8ea8b3e
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