Title of article :
Sino-Russian Energy Relations: Dimensions and Prospects
Author/Authors :
Barari, Khodayar University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran , Shamsian, Somayyeh University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Access and control of Energy has not only been historically instrumental in the
sociopolitical and economic shaping of nations, but also central to the global
world of politics, systems, and geopolitics. Energy resources of the Russian
Federation have made the country more influential in world politics. Energy and
geopolitical issues are especially important to modern People’s Republic of
China as a tool for the country’s economic growth. Since the mid twentieth
century, both countries have attempted to establish mutual energy cooperation as
a key component of their strategic alliance based on producer-consumer needs
and the Good Neighborly Treaty. Nonetheless, since the end of the cold war in
the 1990s, the energy negotiations have been long and unproductive because
both nations are on both sides of the energy market. For the Russian Federation,
revenue from its oil and gas sector traditionally makes up a large portion of its
budget. Thus, Russia is unwilling to make concessions and involve China in its
major upstream energy projects. In the interim, China also seeks to diversify its
oil and gas resources and imports for its own political dependency, growth, and
to prevent countries from overreliance on one single source and market. Issues
such as pricing and the provisions of agreements have made the energy relations
between the two countries more complex than the relations between producers
and consumers. Despite the two countries being neighbors, their relations have
not been developed.
Keywords :
China , Energy Policy , Gas , Oil , Russia
Journal title :
Journal of World Sociopolitical Studies