Title :
National responses to energy vulnerability
Author :
Andrews, Clinton J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Urban Planning & Policy Dev., Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, NJ
Abstract :
Energy availability has again become an important and polarizing issue. Different countries have made distinctive choices affecting the importance of energy as a determinant of economic growth. Analysis of these varying choices helps put the current debate over oil imports in historical context, and illuminates the relative merits of supply-side and demand-side solutions. Some nations have achieved a more effective policy synthesis than others. The objective of energy security is to assure adequate, reliable supplies of energy at reasonable prices and in ways that do not jeopardize major national values and objectives. Energy vulnerability is a state of energy insecurity, typically due to insufficient or inadequately protected domestic supplies. The countries reviewed in this paper illustrate a variety of responses to energy vulnerability. A "best" response would be hard to define given the vastly different policy contexts. It is nonetheless clear that every country combines supply- and demand-side initiatives into an integrated portfolio that addresses price, availability, environmental impact, and other broad public values
Keywords :
environmental factors; fuel; government policies; microeconomics; oil technology; supply and demand; demand-side solutions; domestic supplies; economic growth; energy availability; energy insecurity; energy security; energy supplies; energy vulnerability; environmental impact; national responses; national values; oil imports; policy synthesis; public values; supply-side solutions; Availability; Economic forecasting; Environmental economics; Fuel economy; Government; National security; Petroleum; Power generation economics; Protection; Turning;
Journal_Title :
Technology and Society Magazine, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MTAS.2006.1700018