China, Oil and Global Politics Routledge Contemporary China Series
Auteurs : Andrews-Speed Philip, Dannreuther Roland
China?s rapid economic growth has led to a huge increase in its domestic energy needs. This book provides a critical overview of how China?s growing need for oil imports is shaping its international economic and diplomatic strategy and how this affects global political relations and behaviour.
Part One is focused on the domestic drivers of energy policy: it provides a systematic account of recent trends in China?s energy sector and assesses the context and processes of energy policy making, and concludes by showing how and why China?s oil industry has spread across the world in the last fifteen years. Part Two analyses the political and foreign policy implications of this energy-driven expansion and the challenges this potentially poses for China?s integration into the international system. It examines a number of factors linked to this integration in the energy field, including the unpredictabilities of internal policymaking; China?s determination to promote its own critical national interests, and the general ambition of the Chinese leadership to integrate with the international system on its own terms and at its own speed.
The highly topical book draws together the various dimensions of China?s international energy strategy, and provides insights into the impact of this on China?s growing international presence in various parts of the world.
1. Introduction: China, Oil and Global Politics Part 1: Energy Policy, the Government and China’s Oil Industry 2. China’s Energy Challenges and Policy Priorities 3. The Wider Context of China’s Energy Policy 4. Inside China’s Energy Policy 5. China’s Growing Presence in the International Oil and Gas Arena 6. Driving Forces Behind the Internationalization of China’s Oil Industry Part 2: Energy Policy and China’s Foreign Policy 7. Integration, the West and International Energy Policy 8. The Revisionist Alternative: Energy and the Sino-Russian Axis 9. Hegemony, Oil and Asian Regional Politics 10. The Neo-Imperialist Temptation: Africa and Latin America
Philip Andrews-Speed is a Senior Fellow at the Energy Studies Institute of the National University of Singapore. He has twenty years' experience of China’s energy sector and has recently edited International Competition for Resources: the Role of Law, the State and of Markets.
Roland Dannreuther is Professor and Head of the Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Westminster, UK. Recent publications include International Security: The Contemporary Agenda and, as co-editor, Russia and Islam: Religion, State and Radicalism (also published by Routledge).
Date de parution : 01-2013
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 05-2011
Ouvrage de 248 p.
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes de China, Oil and Global Politics :
Mots-clés :
oil industry; Bo Kong; China’s International Petroleum Policy; Tatsu Kambara; Christopher Howe; China and the Global Energy Crisis; Lim Tai Wei; energy policy; Energy Security in Asia; China and the New International Order; China’s Security Interests in the Twenty-First Century; CNOOC’s Bid; Chinese Government; Energy Resources; Chinese NOCs; Chinese Oil Companies; Energy Conservation; China’s NOCs; China's Oil Industry; China’s Security Interests; NOC; National People’s Congress; China's Energy Policy; China’s Energy; China’s Energy Sector; International Energy Policy; Large Scale Chinese Investments; Energy Efficiency; Malacca Dilemma; China’s Oil Imports; China’s Oil; Sino Russian Energy; India’s ONGC; BP Statistical Review; China’s Oil Companies