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A New Order
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By
Rashid Husain Syed © 2012. Canadian Energy Research Institute
Geopolitics of Energy , Volume 34, Issue 1
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8-15 Page(s) |
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Abstract
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The global energy horizon is undergoing a major metamorphosis. A new energy order is very much in the offing. The global energy center is shifting away, gravitating towards the western hemisphere and not the Middle East. |
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Why Kyoto Will Fail Again (On the day after the
Durban Summit-Technology, Geopolitics, and the
Hydrocarbon Status Quo)
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By
Anis Bajrektarevic © 2012. Canadian Energy Research Institute
Geopolitics of Energy , Volume 34, Issue 1
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2-7 Page(s) |
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Abstract
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The unrest in the Arab world, which has continued for over a year now, implies one important conclusion beyond the regional struggle for democracy: the unrest is very much about new, globally important technology, but even more about a crucial geopolitical breakthrough - an escape from the logics of the hydrocarbon status quo. |
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What Really Springs in the Arab World? (Of the
Arab Spring and Oil)
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By
Professor Anis Bajrektarevic © 2011. Canadian Energy Research Institute
Geopolitics of Energy , Volume 33, Issue 7
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2-8 Page(s) |
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Abstract
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The months-long reporting on the unrest in the Arab world misses one important point: each and every country engulfed by the popular revolt is a republic, while monarchies (situated predominantly on the Arabian Peninsula and the GCC) remain largely intact. |
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Opening Up The Arctic Frontier An Excerpt from
Arctic and Antarctic: Two Poles - Different
Scores
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By
Anis Bajrektarevic © 2010. Canadian Energy Research Institute
Geopolitics of Energy , Volume 32, Issue 9
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2-20 Page(s) |
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The Arctic and Antarctica, the worlds two regions within the polar circles of the northern and southern hemispheres, were rarely discussed in the past (be it within general literature on geopolitics, law, or international relations), but lately both have gained the attention of the international community. At first glance, it seems that the two opposite but complementary polar caps have much in common - for a general audience the differentiating point might be simply where polar bears and where penguins live... |
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Opening Up The Arctic Frontier (Part 2) An Excerpt
from Arctic and Antarctic: Two Poles - Different
Scores
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By
Anis Bajrektarevic © 2010. Canadian Energy Research Institute
Geopolitics of Energy , Volume 32, Issue 12
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7-18 Page(s) |
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Abstract
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The earths poles are caught in limbo between environmental hazards triggered by global warming, rising economic opportunity, and contested geopolitical aspirations - all in the absence of precise and long-range legal regimes. While climate change warns and cautions, legal regimes constrain and oblige, and economic opportunities (funded or assumed) open and invite. Is it any wonder, then, that the dynamics of Arctic economic potential are being discussed so animatedly
among governments, corporations, and other organizations? |
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OPEC: Past, Present, and Future
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By
David Knapp and Vincent Lauerman © 2010. Canadian Energy Research Institute
Geopolitics of Energy , Volume 32, Issue 12
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3-6 Page(s) |
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Abstract
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The modern oil market has been shaped by many factors, but few have had the continualprominence of the Organization of the Oil Exporting Countries. Yet just as the oil market has beensignificantly shaped by OPEC, so has OPEC been shaped by the evolution of global oil markets. Onits 50th Anniversary, the producer group can look back at its turbulent journey with assurance thatimportant lessons have been learned and that the accumulated wisdom of the past will bechallenged over the next 50 years. |
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