PART I: EUROPEAN UNION ENERGY POLICY -- Evolution of EU Energy Policy / with S.D. Sever -- External Dimension of European Energy Policy / with S.D. Sever -- PART II: THE EUROPEAN UNION, RUSSIA AND OTHER ACTORS -- The EU Outreach to Non-Russian Energy -- Roads to Europe for Caspian and Middle Eastern Energy Supplies -- PART III: TURKEY AS A TRANSIT AND CANDIDATE COUNTRY -- Turkey's Role as a 'trans-European' Energy Corridor -- Turkey's Energy Role and its Accession Process -- Conclusions
Summary
Since its seminal origins in the European Coal and Steel Community, EU market integration has been advancing in the field of energy as in the wider economy. However, Russian gas cutoffs to Europe in 2006 and 2009 served as a stark reminder that many member states remain vulnerable in terms of the physical security of their foreign energy inflows, a glaring Achilles heel of the EU that has risen to unprecedented prominence on its policymaking agenda. Turkey, an EU candidate member, has been emerging as a new and potentially more stable and independent 'corridor' for a wider diversity of pipeline-based hydrocarbon exports to the European market. This book offers a freshly provocative look at the nexus linking EU security, trans-Turkey energy supply routes to Europe and Turkey's EU membership negotiations, arguing that Europe's collective energy security prospects have become increasingly tied to Turkey's progress towards joining the EU
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 202-221) and index