Global Public Policy Institute
Reinhardtstraße 15
10117 Berlin
Germany
Phone +49 30 275 959 75-0
Fax +49 30 690 88 200
E-Mail gppi@gppi.net
Related focus areas
Related projects
Common Goals – Different Approaches?
Transatlantic Energy Governance Dialogues
Global Climate Governance and the Making of China's Climate Change Policy
Related publications
Andreas Goldthau, Caroline Kuzemko, Andrei V. Belyi, Michael F. Keating, eds. (2012)
Dynamics of Energy Governance in Europe and Russia
Palgrave Macmillan (UK) / Macmillan (US)
Andreas Goldthau, Wade Hoxtell (2012)
The Impact of Shale Gas on European Energy Security
GPPi policy paper no. 14
Andreas Goldthau (2012)
The Uniqueness of the Energy Security, Justice and Governance Problem
Energy Policy (41), pp. 232–40
Andreas Goldthau, Wade Hoxtell (2012)
Addressing Carbon Emissions and Oil Price Volatility – Challenges and Opportunities for Transatlantic Energy Cooperation
Transatlantic agenda paper
Governing Global Energy: Existing Approaches and Discourses
Article • July 2011
Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability
Andreas Goldthau
Soaring demand for fossil fuels stemming from new consumer heavyweights coincides with an urgent need to decarbonize global energy systems. At the same time, providing the “bottom billion” with access to modern forms of energy is a humanitarian imperative as much as it is making energy systems sustainable. Managing these intertwined challenges requires effective governance on a global scale. This article lays out the main challenges that need to be addressed during the looming energy transition process; based on that, it reviews the existing literature in the fields of international relations, global (public) policy and global governance dealing with these challenges. It argues that the subject of global energy governance remains understudied; that existing scholarly works are characterized by a lopsided attention to the selected aspects of global energy instead of accounting for the intertwined challenges of security, climate change and energy access; and that, as a consequence, further and more holistic research is urgently needed.
