THE EU'S ENERGY POLICY AND ITS DRIVING FORCES

被引:1
|
作者
Borovsky, Yu. V. [1 ]
Shishkina, O. V. [1 ]
机构
[1] MGIMO Univ, Dept Int Relat & Foreign Policy Russia, Moscow, Russia
来源
关键词
EU; energy policy; European Union; energy security; theories of international relations; realism; liberalism; constructivism; theories of European integration; OBSTINATE; OBSOLETE;
D O I
10.17976/jpps/2022.03.06
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
The energy crisis, which the EU faces since Autumn 2021 and especially dramatically since March 2022, has once again brought up the issue of stable and affordable energy supply. The mechanisms of crisis management at the EU's disposal did not allow it to react to the situation effectively, although the new energy resources price spike was caused by 'old' reasons, known to the EU from its experience of 1970-1980s: the resources deficit and political instability in the supplier region. What was new was that paradoxically, the EU energy policy, instead of preventing or at least smoothing the crisis, made it worse. The authors consider the driving forces that stand behind the development of EU energy policy and, proceeding from that, explain why, with a chronic energy resources deficit, the EU was steadily abandoning its long-term contracts with suppliers and calling on its member states to proceed with a nuclear phase-out. Why, under the conditions of post-pandemic energy growth of demand on the world market and an unprecedented price spike, it took these seemingly illogical steps: it refused to start the newly built gas pipeline Nord Stream-2 and was keen to buy costly LNG from alternative suppliers and to continue the development of unreliable and expensive renewable energy while gas prices on the spot markets kept breaking the records. To define the driving forces of the EU's energy policy both international relations (realism, liberalism, social constructivism and neo-Marxism) and European integration theories (intergovernmental approach, institutionalism, neofunctionalism and communication theory) are applied to cover each aspect. Rational approaches such as realism and liberalism, as well as neofunctionalism and some other theories do not yield any insights into the driving forces and practical steps taken by the EU during the 2021-2022 energy crisis. Theories, which have social approach at their basis - social constructivism, neo-Marxism, etc., offer a more logical explanation of the EU's decisions.
引用
收藏
页码:67 / 79
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] RENEWABLE ENERGY POLICY CONVERGENCE IN THE EU
    Song, Malin
    [J]. ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT, 2013, 24 (1-2) : 315 - 317
  • [42] Turkey's integration process into the EU and its implication to Turkey's foreign policy
    Dagci, Kenan
    [J]. Changes in Social and Business Environment, 2006, : 17 - 19
  • [43] Driving forces for import of waste for energy recovery in Sweden
    Olofsson, M
    Sahlin, J
    Ekvall, T
    Sundberg, J
    [J]. WASTE MANAGEMENT & RESEARCH, 2005, 23 (01) : 3 - 12
  • [44] Driving forces of solar energy technology innovation and evolution
    Luan, Chunjuan
    Sun, Xiaoming
    Wang, Yalan
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2021, 287
  • [45] EU's Role and Policy
    Zhang Jian
    [J]. Contemporary International Relations, 2019, 29 (03) : 34 - 45
  • [46] The policy assessment of the EU's social policy
    Ernst, Kelly
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2007, 17 : 94 - 94
  • [47] On the driving forces and energy sources of planetary magnetic fields
    Dolginov, SS
    [J]. PROGRESS IN FLUID FLOW RESEARCH: TURBULENCE AND APPLIED MHD, 1998, 182 : 301 - 332
  • [48] The EU' s Clean Energy strategy for islands: A policy perspective on Malta's spatial governance in energy transition
    Kotzebue, Julia R.
    Weissenbacher, Manfred
    [J]. ENERGY POLICY, 2020, 139
  • [49] The geopolitical driving forces and mechanism on Arctic energy exploitation
    Wang L.
    Wu L.
    Li Y.
    Zhang D.
    Yang L.
    [J]. Yang, Linsheng (yangls@igsnrr.ac.cn), 1600, Science Press (76): : 1078 - 1089
  • [50] Coal-to-Liquids (CtL): Driving Forces and Barriers - Synergies and Conflicts from an Energy and Climate Policy Perspective
    Fischedick, Manfred
    [J]. ENERGY POLICY, 2010, 38 (01) : 685 - 686