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Uniform Title New realities (2015)
Title New realities : energy security in the 2010s and implications for the U.S. military / John R. Deni, editor
Published Carlisle Barracks, PA : Strategic Studies Institute and U.S. Army War College Press, 2015

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Description 1 online resource (x, 363 pages) : illustrations
Contents The Military Implications of 21st Century Energy Security / John R. Deni -- Russia and Energy Markets / Theresa Sabonis-Helf -- The Arab Uprisings and Middle East and North Africa Energy Producers: Heavy Costs and Ephemeral Benefits / John Calabrese -- Game Changer? The Energy Revolution and American Policies Toward Africa / Ian Taylor -- The Impact of Political Instability on the Development of Latin American Energy Supplies / David R. Mares -- The Shale Revolution and the New Geopolitics of Energy / Robert A. Manning -- The Security Risks and Rewards of Renewable Energies: Implications for the United States / Karen Smith Stegen -- The Evolving Global Nuclear Industry Landscape and the Status of the U.S. Nuclear Industry / Jane Nakano -- China's Burgeoning Demand and its Quest for Resources / Michal Meidan -- The Changing Calculus of India's Energy Security / Tom Cutler -- Energy Demand in the Developing World / Deborah Gordon -- New Supply Routes-New Conflicts? / Michael T. Klare -- The Army's Approach to Installation and Operational Energy Security Challenges / Katherine Hammack -- Operational Energy as a Stepping Stone Toward National Resilience / Paul Roege -- Hacks on Gas: Energy, Cyber Security, and U.S. Defense / Chris Bronk -- The North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (Re)Engagement on Energy Security: Managing Unmet Expectations / John R. Deni -- The Feasibility of Small Modular Reactors for Military Installations / Ronald Filadelfo
Summary "Global energy markets are undergoing dramatic shifts. Developing countries are beginning to outpace their more developed counterparts in energy demand, the result not simply of higher economic growth rates in the former, but also due to increased efficiency in the latter. Traditional producers of hydrocarbons in places such as Latin America, Eurasia, North Africa, and the Middle East face a host of political, economic, technical, and societal challenges that could potentially lead to major disruptions in the global energy supply. Meanwhile, the unconventional fossil fuels revolution has led to major changes in the flow of the global energy supply, seemingly overnight. All of these changes will have implications for U.S. security generally and the U.S. military specifically. Evolving energy-based U.S. national interests in Africa or the Middle East may shape the degree to which the U.S. military becomes involved in political or humanitarian crises in those regions. Tightening energy supplies may alter fundamentally the way in which the United States wields military force in a contingency operation. And closer to home, increasingly vulnerable domestic energy infrastructure may undermine military installation operations and security. To further investigate the changes among energy producers and consumers and to subsequently assess the implications for the U.S. military, the Strategic Studies Institute--the research arm of the U.S. Army War College--organized a conference in November 2013 entitled, 'New Realities: Energy Security in the 2010s and Implications for the U.S. Military.' That event, which included North American and European experts from government, the military, academia, the private sector, and think tanks, was hosted by the Reserve Officers Association in Washington, DC, and funded through the generous support of the U.S. Army War College Foundation. The chapters in this edited volume are based on the presentations of those experts at the New Realities conference, and the Strategic Studies Institute is pleased to offer them as part of the ongoing discussion over the future of the U.S. Army in American national security."--Pages ix-x
Notes "February 2015"--Page iii
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
PDF version; title from title screen (viewed Mar. 19, 2015)
digitized 2023. HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL
Subject Energy security -- Congresses
National security -- Congresses
Energy security -- Military aspects -- Congresses
National security -- Military aspects -- Congresses
Energy security.
National security.
Energisäkerhet.
Energiindustri -- militära aspekter.
Energipolitik.
Energikällor.
Väpnade styrkor.
Säkerhetspolitik.
Genre/Form Conference papers and proceedings.
Conference papers and proceedings.
Actes de congrès.
Form Electronic book
Author Deni, John R., editor.
Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute, issuing body.
Army War College (U.S.). Press, publisher.
ISBN 9781584876564
1584876565
Other Titles Energy security in the 2010s and implications for the U.S. military