Abstract

In the early 2020s the worlds transition from carbon-intensive to climate-neutral energy use has already become a discernible and a difficult-to-reverse process. With Joe Bidens election as US president, the United States have returned to the Paris Climate Agreement and have become a key driver of this process (along with the EU and China). As a result, the international community has reached a consensus on the ongoing energy transition. This process will require considerable effort and may take several decades. Nevertheless, the impact of energy transition on traditional approaches to energy security, which emerged largely as a result of the global oil crises of the 1970s and 1980s and are centered around the supply of fossil fuels, is already a relevant research topic. This problem is examined relying on the relevant terminological, theoretical and factual material. The article concludes that energy transition will ultimately undermine the carbon paradigm that has underpinned energy security policies since the 1970s. Rapid development of renewable and other low-carbon energy sources will certainly remove key energy security risks of energy importers and, possibly, allow them to achieve energy independence. However, a post-carbon era may also generate new risks. For countries that rely heavily on oil, gas and coal exports, energy transition will result in the loss of markets and revenues. It may present an energy security threat for them as well as it will require a costly and technologically complex process of the energy sector decarbonization. Some exporters, especially those with high fuel rents and insufficient financial reserves, may face serious economic and social upheavals as a result of energy transition. The EU and the US energy transition policies reflect provisions of all three fundamental international relations theoretical paradigms, including realism. This means that the EU and the US policy, aimed at promoting climate agenda, may be expected to be rather tough and aggressive. China as the third key player in energy transition is still following a liberal course; however, it may change in the future.

Highlights

  • Ресурсно-сырьевой и технологический уклад мировой энергетики, в рамках которого международное сообщество опирается главным образом на ископаемое углеродное топливо, сложился в XIX—XX вв. (Smil, 2010) и сохранится в качестве превалирующего еще несколько десятилетий

  • the United States have returned to the Paris Climate Agreement

  • the international community has reached a consensus on the ongoing energy transition

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Summary

10 European Climate Law

Reach Provisional Agreement: Press Release of the Council of the EU, 5 May 2021 // European Council. Подчеркивая важность двустороннего и многостороннего сотрудничества в области «энергетического перехода», Пекин пообещал достичь пика выбросов ПГ к 2030 г., а углеродной нейтральности — к 2060 г.19, несмотря на масштабы своей экономики и сильную зависимость от углеродного топлива (Бобылев, Барабошкина, Джу, 2020). Экспортеры при общемировом переходе на потребление углеродно-нейтральной энергии, напротив, лишаются привычных рынков сбыта и экспортной выручки, порой невосполнимой, а также сталкиваются с необходимостью декарбонизации и кардинальной трансформации энергетики, что требует от них как существенных финансовых средств, так и технологий. К группе 3 принадлежат страны, у которых топливная рента по отношению к ВВП составляет менее 20 %, а экономика уже достаточно диверсифицирована и критически не зависит от экспорта углеродного сырья (Россия, Иран, Алжир, Казахстан, Венесуэла и др.).

22 A New World
23 Energy Outlook
25 Fact sheet
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