4.7 Article

Establishing and comparing energy security trends in resource-rich exporting nations (Russia and the Caspian Sea region)

Journal

RESOURCES POLICY
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.resourpol.2020.101746

Keywords

Energy security; Definition; Dimensions; Metrics; Resource-rich countries

Funding

  1. Ernst Mach Grant (2019) Development of methodology for measuring energy security and risks for balancing energy security and risk for resource-rich countries in the climate constrained world (Karl-Franzens University of Graz, Institute for Systems Scienc [IND130547]
  2. Austrian Agency for International Cooperation in Education and Research (OeAD)
  3. National Scholarship Programme of the Slovak Republic (2018) Energy Security in Central Asian Region: The role of Kazakhstan (Comenius University in Bratislava, Department of Political Science) [NSP009]
  4. Kazakhstani Ministry of Science's Grant (2020) Energy security and energy policy-making framework in the Eurasian Economic Union (AlFarabi Kazakh National University) [AP051310298]
  5. Newton Fund Researcher Links Travel Grant (2019) Sustainable energy and climate change in Russia: policies, discourses, and narratives (Nottingham Trent University) [NF019]
  6. Newton Fund Researcher Links Travel Grant (2019) Sustainable energy and climate change in Russia: policies, discourses, and narratives (Altai State University) [NF019]

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In the international arena, it is often the case that in countries which largely depend on foreign resources, energy security, and its key components i.e. security of energy supply, environment, technology, geopolitical and economic factors, is a subject of concern. However, due to the abundance of fossil fuel resources in resource-rich exporting nations, there is a lack of understanding of the risks around energy security and accordingly often a policy vacuum. Conceptualising energy security from different geopolitical vantage points will allow future concerns around energy supply security, climate change, and regional economic crises to be evaluated. By using policy documents and developing a time series approach and normalized z-scores for a range of comparable metrics this article compares the energy security performance in six Caspian Sea countries individually and collectively. The article results show that Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan made significant progress in energy security since 1990, while energy security indicators in Russia, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan regressed. Iran has a leading position in energy security performance, while Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan have the lowest level of the energy security indicators compare to other region countries. This article both contributes a replicable definition of energy security that can be undertaken for other global regions, and begins to incorporate diversification and renewables development to enhance domestic energy security assessment.

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