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From a liberal to a strategic actor: the evolution of the EU’s approach to international energy governance

Marco Siddi, Irina Kustova

2021Journal of European Public Policy50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Most scholars have described the European Union (EU) as a liberal actor in its approach to international climate and energy governance. This paper argues that the EU has shifted to a strategic approach, including the use of legislation and the adoption of negotiating positions that promote a political agenda. This is illustrated through an analysis of the EU’s evolving stance on multilateral energy governance and its handling of the Nord Stream 2 project. The EU began to shift towards a strategic stance already in the 2000s, in the context of the Energy Charter Treaty negotiations and the growing securitization of European energy debates. Following the polycrisis of the mid-2010s, the EU adopted a full-fledged strategic stance on external energy policy. Geopolitical crises and great power competition, together with intra-EU divisions and an increased focus on the climate agenda, have catalyzed the EU’s shift to a strategic approach.

Topics & Concepts

GeopoliticsTreatyEuropean unionCorporate governancePolitical scienceNegotiationContext (archaeology)CharterEnergy securityPolitical economyEnergy policyCompetition (biology)International tradeEconomic systemPoliticsPublic administrationEconomicsLawRenewable energyElectrical engineeringEcologyBiologyEngineeringFinancePaleontologyGlobal Energy Security and PolicyEuropean Union Policy and GovernanceInternational Relations and Foreign Policy