Abstract

This paper examines how the latest mega plan and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) will impact the geopolitics of energy and infrastructural development. With a massive change in the supply and demand of global energy and its infrastructure, the transition of international energy order is in the making. While the US is going towards a more isolationist path from its traditional superpower role, there are rising economies such as China, India, Japan, and Russia which are undoubtedly playing a vital role in the geopolitical stage and the other development endeavors. Several regions such as Central Asia, the Arctic, Eastern Mediterranean, and the South China Sea are offering substantial natural gas and oil reserves and drawing global attention to develop energy cooperation. This situation is profoundly influencing the transition of energy order. In this transition, BRI is supposed to play an important role. As a mega development strategy with a robust geostrategic dimension, it purposes to advocate interconnectivity collaboration in framework, exchange, and advancement among the partaking nations. This super arrangement offers a lot of ventures, foundation developments, and modern reconciliation in the energy sector. The country is trying to establish a multilateral platform for endorsing and shielding energy cooperation under BRI. This paper, therefore, attempts to observe how this mega plan will contribute to reshaping the existing energy order as well as the geopolitics of energy with motivation on multifaceted energy collaboration.

Highlights

  • Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), incomparable in size and capacity, is offering massive investments in its member countries across Asia, Europe, and Africa

  • With discussion of the BRI of energy geopolitics and its impact on infrastructure and connectivity and economic growth, this paper argues BRI’s contribution to changing nature of the existing energy order and the total impact of the multimodal impact of transport infrastructure on economic level that will gradually shape the future of energy and transport geopolitics

  • Apart from these four broad areas of energy cooperation, this latest “Vision and Actions” document highlighted seven more areas of energy cooperation through BRI. ese are unimpeded trade, policy coordination, energy production capacity cooperation, energy investment cooperation, energy infrastructure connectivity, and sustainable energy for all and better governance structure [45]. Based on all these proposed areas of collaboration, China has already started to work on strengthening energy cooperation through several of BRI’s energy projects

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Summary

Research Article

The Impact of Energy Cooperation and the Role of the One Belt and Road Initiative in Revolutionizing the Geopolitics of Energy among Regional Economic Powers: An Analysis of Infrastructure Development and Project Management. Is paper examines how the latest mega plan and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) will impact the geopolitics of energy and infrastructural development. While the US is going towards a more isolationist path from its traditional superpower role, there are rising economies such as China, India, Japan, and Russia which are undoubtedly playing a vital role in the geopolitical stage and the other development endeavors. Several regions such as Central Asia, the Arctic, Eastern Mediterranean, and the South China Sea are offering substantial natural gas and oil reserves and drawing global attention to develop energy cooperation. As a mega development strategy with a robust geostrategic dimension, it purposes to advocate interconnectivity collaboration in framework, exchange, and advancement among the partaking nations. is super arrangement offers a lot of ventures, foundation developments, and modern reconciliation in the energy sector. e country is trying to establish a multilateral platform for endorsing and shielding energy cooperation under BRI. is paper, attempts to observe how this mega plan will contribute to reshaping the existing energy order as well as the geopolitics of energy with motivation on multifaceted energy collaboration

Introduction
Uzbekistan Yemen
Fossil fuels Renewables
Net fossil fuel exporters
Results
Global energy governance
South Caucasus Gas Pipeline Tanap Tap
New energy order Power politics
Conclusion
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