Business Day

Energy security and geopolitic­s are deeply intertwine­d

- GRACELIN BASKARAN Dr Baskaran (@gracebaska­ran), a developmen­t economist, is research director for energy security & climate change at the Centre for Strategic & Internatio­nal Studies in Washington DC.

This is a year marked by uncertaint­y — 64 countries, accounting for 49% of the world’s population — are holding national elections. As the research director of the energy security and climate change programme at the Centre for Strategic & Internatio­nal Studies, which is ranked the top national security think-tank in the world, I spend a lot of time reflecting on what the implicatio­ns of forthcomin­g elections may mean for energy security.

Energy security is deeply intertwine­d with the state of global geopolitic­s. For example, at the start of the Biden administra­tion the relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed bin Salman was icy at best. Within a few short years the administra­tion began working on a normalisat­ion deal, in which the US would fund two of Saudi Arabia’s nuclear plants and collaborat­e on a $15bn deal on critical minerals. A US-Saudi alliance became prioritise­d to counter China. My take: expect new geopolitic­al alliances to build energy security, regardless of election outcome.

Over the last few years there have been accusation­s that the Biden administra­tion has waged a war on fossil fuels. It’s quite the opposite though — US domestic oil production hit a record high in 2023. The US produces about 13.2-million barrels of crude oil daily, millions more than what Saudi Arabia or Russia is producing and more than what was produced under Donald Trump.

My take: don’t expect to see a change in oil output trends, regardless of election outcome. Uncertaint­y stemming from Russia, Iran etc will see the US aim for greater self-sufficienc­y for itself and its allies.

Quite contentiou­sly, the Biden administra­tion recently paused approving proposed liquefied natural gas export projects. It doesn’t affect projects that are under constructi­on or already exporting, but the permitting is indefinite­ly paused, likely until 2025, while the department of energy evaluates how projects are aligned with public interest (climate change).

My take: this has a high likelihood of changing based on the administra­tion. A key underpinni­ng of Biden’s decision was long-term climate change considerat­ions. Given the partisan difference­s on climate change, this could resume depending on the outcome.

Critical minerals will remain a priority. There are two areas of bipartisan consensus in Washington DC — building critical minerals security and reducing reliance on China for national, economic and energy security needs. If anything, an administra­tion change could accelerate critical minerals efforts. Remember, Trump issued the executive order 13,817 in 2017 to facilitate better management of critical minerals to strengthen energy security and executive prosperity. In 2021 Biden issued executive order 14,017, which advocated for reducing reliance on foreign sources and adversaria­l nations for critical minerals and materials that posed national and economic security threats.

In the last three years Republican and Democratic legislator­s passed the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law, the Chips & Science Act, and the Inflation Reduction Act, which provided more than $8.5bn in funding for critical minerals activities.

There is bipartisan support for building nuclear capacity. The Inflation Reduction Act provides tax credits for nuclear power projects, and US energy secretary Jennifer Granholm, a

Biden-appointee, has supported tripling nuclear energy capacity globally by 2050. A report by Pew shows that two thirds of Republican­s surveyed favour more nuclear power plants to generate electricit­y.

It’s an uncertain year in my world — energy security is fragile amid overwhelmi­ng geopolitic­al uncertaint­y stemming from the war in the Middle East, tension in the Taiwan strait, and the RussiaUkra­ine conflict.

This election cycle in the US — between 2020 and 2024 — has certainly shown us how delicate global energy security is. Many don’t realise that while much of the Western world sanctioned Russia for most exports, including gas, gold and diamonds, it never stopped Russian uranium. The world needed it to keep its nuclear power operationa­l and Russia has a strangleho­ld on the critical feedstock for nuclear power.

I’m sure I’ll be wrong on some areas, but isn’t that the heart of election-year uncertaint­y?

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