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Dr Ngoc NGUYEN Institute for International Relations, Vietnam
Surge in demand for energy and implications for America’s Relations with Russia and China Dr Ngoc NGUYEN Institute for International Relations, Vietnam
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Surge in demand for energy
World energy use (1990 – 2020) (quadrillion BTU) (Source: 1990: 346 1999: 381.8 2010: 489.7 2020: 607.1
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Increasing oil consumption of the US, Russia and China (million barrels/day) (Source: BP Statistical Review of World Energy, June 2006: 11) Countries 2002 2003 2004 2005 US 19.76 20.03 20.73 20.65 China 5.54 6.01 7.08 7.27 Russia 2.61 2.65 2.71 2.75
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Increasing energy demand vs limited and non-renewable resources
* Only ten world biggest oil consumers: nearly 50 million barrels ONE DAY (in 2005) * All world oil reserves: 1,200.7 billion barrels (in 2005) (Source: BP Statistical Review of World Energy, June 2006: 6, 11).
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Implications: Conflict of Interests and Challenges to US Global Hegemony
Iran: world fourth oil producer Central Asia: world second energy resources SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organisation): China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan Africa: Sudan Latin America
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Iran US: pressure on Iran’s nuclear programme
China: first buyer of Iranian oil Russia: increase political leverage China + Russia: opposed to UN Security Council’s embargo on Iran
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Central Asia Russia: backyard, geopolitical and economic importance: agreements with Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan. China: adjacent, easy to transport US: 3 aims: (i) access to rich resources, (ii) control Russia, (iii) contain China’s rise.
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SCO (China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan)
July 2005: ask for US’ withdrawal from Central Asia June 2006: SCO 6th summit: joined by Head of State from Iran, Pakistan, Mongolia and India: 6 SCO members and 4 observers: a quarter of world oil resources. Refusal to US’s request to be an observer of SCO
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Africa: Sudan US approach > < China’s approach
US: democracy, good governance, human rights break relation China: non-intervention, non-ideological Sudan is China’s biggest oil producer abroad
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Latin America US’s ‘backyard’ and traditional oil exporter
Return of left-wing movements in Latin America China’s intensive efforts and presence in the region challenge the order that US has set up and maintained.
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THANK YOU FOR LISTENING
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