Abstract

Can non-EU member states influence the EU’s energy policy? The Europeanization of energy policy in third countries is often described as a one-directional process in which these countries essentially adopt the EU <em>energy acquis</em>. Our article questions this dominant view by exploring whether and how third countries can influence the formulation and implementation of EU energy policy. We argue that relative differences in third country influence depend on their access to relevant venues and actors of EU policy-making as well as their structural power resources. We develop a typology linking these two factors to the outsider, follower, challenger, or shaper roles that third countries assume in EU energy governance. We empirically probe our argument in three case studies representing different models of EU–third country cooperation. Our cases include a group of nine Southeast and East European countries (Energy Community), Switzerland (bilateral arrangements), and Norway (European Economic Area). The analysis shows that it is access and structural power which together define the extent to which third countries are able to influence the formulation of EU energy policy and customize its implementation to their domestic needs. We find that while the Energy Community members are followers in EU energy governance, Switzerland and Norway are shapers. Strikingly, the influence of these two non-EU members may occasionally even surpass that of smaller EU member states. This highlights that third countries are not merely downloading EU energy regulation but sometimes also succeed in uploading their own preferences. Our contribution has implications for the post-Brexit EU–UK energy relations and qualifies claims about EU regulatory hegemony in the wider region.

Highlights

  • Can, and if so how, do non-members influence EU energy policy? Brexit has placed third country relations with the European Union (EU) in the spotlight

  • We argue that the relative influence of different third countries on EU energy governance depends on two main factors: their access to relevant venues and actors of EU energy policy-making, and their structural power resources

  • We explored the relative influence of third countries on EU energy policy

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Summary

Introduction

If so how, do non-members influence EU energy policy? Brexit has placed third country relations with the European Union (EU) in the spotlight. Common to each of these relationships is the growing entanglement between EU and national policies, a process that EU scholarship refers to as ‘Europeanization’ (cf Cowles, Caporaso, & Risse, 2001) This entanglement can generally work in two directions; studies show how the EU influences member state policies and vice versa (cf Featherstone & Radaelli, 2003). Whereas access is a necessary precondition to creating channels of influence, structural power resources provide the political weight to utilize these channels This differentiation accounts for variation in influence among countries that are subject to similar institutional relationships with the EU. The cases represent different models of third-country institutional relations with the EU They include a group of nine Southeast and East European countries (contracting parties of the EnC), Switzerland (bilateral arrangements with the EU), and Norway (member of the EEA). We conclude by reviewing the implications of our main arguments for future EU–UK relations

A Framework of Third Country Roles in EU Energy Policy
Case Studies of Third Country Influence on EU Energy Policy
Energy Community: A Follower with New Demands
Switzerland: A Shaper at the Crossroads
Norway: A Reactive Shaper
Comparing Followers and Shapers
Findings
Conclusion

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