Low-Carbon Energy Security From a European Perspective 2016
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-802970-1.00001-2
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Challenging the Energy Security Paradigm

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“…Energy transition will reshape existing alliances between nations and cooperation among countries in energy geopolitics at many levels (IREA, 2019), bringing more complicated geopolitical consequences (Rothkopf et al, 2009;Scholten, 2018b;Overland et al, 2019). On the one hand, the layout and implementation of large-scale new energy projects will weaken existing geopolitical alliances based on fossil fuels and promote the switch to the regional power grid community (Gruenig et al, 2016). Criekemans (2011) pointed out that the investment in new energy technologies is likely to form a new geopolitical power centre, which will lead to a new world energy order dominated by a few large countries (possibly including China and/or the United States) or promote a more equal distribution of geopolitical forces in many countries (Criekemans, 2011).…”
Section: Energy Transition Reshapes Relations Among Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Energy transition will reshape existing alliances between nations and cooperation among countries in energy geopolitics at many levels (IREA, 2019), bringing more complicated geopolitical consequences (Rothkopf et al, 2009;Scholten, 2018b;Overland et al, 2019). On the one hand, the layout and implementation of large-scale new energy projects will weaken existing geopolitical alliances based on fossil fuels and promote the switch to the regional power grid community (Gruenig et al, 2016). Criekemans (2011) pointed out that the investment in new energy technologies is likely to form a new geopolitical power centre, which will lead to a new world energy order dominated by a few large countries (possibly including China and/or the United States) or promote a more equal distribution of geopolitical forces in many countries (Criekemans, 2011).…”
Section: Energy Transition Reshapes Relations Among Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%