Energy Security: Managing Risk in a Dynamic Legal and Regulatory Environment
Barry Barton, Catherine Redgwell, Anita Rønne, and Donald N. Zillman
Abstract
This volume examines energy security in a privatized, liberalized, and increasingly global energy market, in which the concept of sustainability has developed together with a higher awareness of environmental issues, but where the potential for supply disruptions, price fluctuation, and threats to infrastructure safety must also be considered. Part I commences with an essential introductory chapter which defines energy security and sets forth the key issues and themes of the book. There then follows several cross-cutting chapters which include sceptical analysis of energy security claims from ... More
This volume examines energy security in a privatized, liberalized, and increasingly global energy market, in which the concept of sustainability has developed together with a higher awareness of environmental issues, but where the potential for supply disruptions, price fluctuation, and threats to infrastructure safety must also be considered. Part I commences with an essential introductory chapter which defines energy security and sets forth the key issues and themes of the book. There then follows several cross-cutting chapters which include sceptical analysis of energy security claims from an environmental perspective and a broader geopolitical analysis of energy security. Part II examines a wide variety of international, regional, and national approaches to energy security issues. Energy security concerns differ considerably from country to country; however, most of the chapters examining particular nations provide an economic and historical context of their energy security concerns, followed by a detailed analysis of the legal provisions relating to each of the main energy sectors (oil, gas, coal, electricity, nuclear, and renewable). This entails examination of regulation, organization, and planning for security and other purposes. In a number of cases, energy security law is shaped by other factors such as market liberalization, environmental protection, and competition policy. Part III comprises two final chapters, the first contrasting the various national and regional approaches and analysing cross-cutting issues, whilst the concluding chapter forecasts future trends in the legal regulation of energy security.
Keywords:
energy security,
managing risk,
regulatory environment,
global energy market,
sustainability,
supply disruptions,
price fluctuation,
infrastructure safety,
market liberalization,
environmental protection
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2004 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199271610 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2010 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199271610.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Barry Barton, Editor
Professor, School of Law, University of Waikato
Catherine Redgwell, Editor
from March 2004, Professor of International Law, University College London
Anita Rønne, Editor
Associate Professor in Energy Law, Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen
Donald N. Zillman, Editor
Godfrey Professor of Law, University of Maine School of Law
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