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Revived energy diplomacy for the new European Commission

This piece was originally published by Clingendael Institute – International Affairs Think Tank and Academy

 

Read Revived energy diplomacy for the new European Commission here

The new European Commission comes at a time of great geopolitical and geoeconomic challenges. They brought to the fore the key role that energy plays in the security, industrial competitiveness and economic stability of Europe and its international partners. The EU’s energy systems are undergoing rapid transformation towards more flexible and interconnected power markets, further electrification and sustainable demand reduction. This offers an opportunity to lessen the EU’s dependency on volatile fossil fuel markets as well as reducing exposure to unwarranted dependencies on foreign suppliers. The EU has a key interest in sharing its domestic experience and technologies with other countries to bolster their energy transition and strengthen its alliances amidst changing geopolitics. EU energy diplomacy can serve its broader security, foreign, trade and climate policy.

Now is the time to upgrade and accelerate the EU’s energy diplomacy in order to ensure it is both a strong global player and a trusted partner. In this paper, several experts from European think tanks outline priorities for the new European Commission in the field of the European Green Deal energy diplomacy. The recommendations are based on previous analysis and expert debates.

Read the recommendations for the new European Commission here



Authors (in alphabetical order):
Nicolas Berghmans, Flaminia Bonanni, Giulia Cretti, Giovanni D’Amico, Christian Egenhofer, Mats Engström, Gonzalo Escribano, Marco Giuli, Maciej Jakubik, Lara Lázaro-Touza, Leonela Leca, Sarah Lokenberg, Lorena Stella Martini, Alfonso Medinilla, Maria Pastukhova, Federica Prandin, Pieter de Pous, Daniel Scholten, Richard Smith, Ignacio Urbasos, Louise van Schaik


Photo by Alexandros Michailidis / Shutterstock

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