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Geopolitical Energy: A Persistent Influence

Energy is more than fuel and electricity: it underpins industry, transport, household welfare, and military capability. That centrality makes energy an unusually effective lever in international politics. States, companies, and nonstate actors use supply, price, infrastructure, regulation, and technological control to advance strategic aims. The practice persists because of four enduring features: uneven resource distribution, long-lived infrastructure and contracts, the immediacy of economic pain when supplies are constrained, and the broad knock-on effects on alliances and domestic politics.

Core mechanisms of energy geopolitics

  • Supply manipulation: producers can cut or divert exports to create shortages or punish partners. This is done overtly through quotas and production decisions or covertly through procedural delays, transit disruptions, and sabotage.
  • Price influence: major producers coordinate to raise or lower prices; buyers and sellers also affect markets with releases from strategic reserves or by withholding exports.
  • Infrastructure control: pipelines, terminals, ports, and power grids are choke points. Whoever controls routes and terminals can exert pressure on transit-dependent states.
  • Regulatory and financial tools: sanctions, export controls, investment screening, and preferential financing shape energy flows without firing a shot.
  • Technological and supply-chain leverage: control over refining capacity, advanced equipment, or critical minerals for batteries and solar panels creates dependence beyond hydrocarbons.
  • Cyber and kinetic disruption: attacks on grids, pipelines, or terminals can interrupt supplies rapidly and create political leverage.

Past and modern instances

  • 1973 oil embargo: Arab producers enforced an embargo that sharply elevated oil prices and reshaped Western foreign policy for years, underscoring how limiting resources can be used to accomplish political objectives.
  • Russia–Ukraine gas disputes (2006, 2009, 2014–2022): recurring supply stoppages and pricing conflicts exposed the vulnerability of transit states and pushed Europe to broaden its energy sources and expand storage and LNG infrastructure. Before 2022, Russia provided about 40% of the European Union’s pipeline gas; abrupt cutbacks in 2021–2022 led to rapid emergency actions across the continent.
  • OPEC and OPEC+ coordination: production limits and policy decisions led by Saudi Arabia, along with coordinated moves with Russia under OPEC+ since 2016, have been employed to buttress prices or cushion market disruptions. The 2020 Saudi–Russia price clash briefly collapsed prices, after which unified cuts helped rebalance markets.
  • Sanctions on Iran and Venezuela: U.S. measures reduced oil exports from both nations, tightening global supplies and illustrating how financial tools can reshape energy flows and influence state behavior without direct military intervention.
  • Colonial Pipeline ransomware (2021) and Ukrainian grid cyberattacks (2015–2016): these cyber events showed that nonkinetic strikes on energy networks can trigger significant economic and political fallout, from localized fuel shortages to widespread civilian strain.
  • Power of Siberia and broader Russia–China energy deals: extensive gas and oil agreements reveal how long-term energy partnerships establish geopolitical alignments and generate durable mutual dependence and influence.
  • Supply-chain leverage for green technologies: China’s leading role in solar panel production and much of the battery-material and processing network gives it significant leverage in a decarbonizing global economy; adjustments in exports or manufacturing can reverberate throughout worldwide clean‑energy deployment.

Why these tools continue to prove effective

  • Essentiality and immediacy: energy shortages produce visible, fast economic pain—heating bills, factory slowdowns, or transport disruption—making them powerful signals and punishments.
  • Asymmetric dependencies: exporters and transit states often differ sharply in how easily they can replace partners, so small disruptions can have outsized impacts on importers.
  • Long investment horizons: pipelines, refineries, and power plants tie partners into decades-long relationships. Those sunk costs create political leverage.
  • Market complexity: spot markets, long-term contracts, financial hedging, and strategic reserves create many levers: price management, legal disputes, and financial penalties can all be used to exert influence.
  • Domestic political leverage: leaders can marshal energy policy for internal cohesion or blame external actors for price rises, producing domestic benefits from external pressure.

Ways energy weaponization is carried out

  • Direct export cuts or embargoes: halting deliveries, imposing transit charges, or rerouting cargo toward favored political partners.
  • Production management: OPEC+ output limits or strategic production choices by major state-owned firms that shape global pricing.
  • Legal and financial measures: sanctions aimed at tankers, insurance providers, banking entities, or investment pathways to restrict a nation’s capacity to sell energy abroad.
  • Infrastructure operations: slowing clearance procedures, postponing pipeline upkeep, or employing port oversight to disrupt outbound shipments.
  • Cyberattacks and sabotage: striking control networks, pump facilities, or loading terminals to disrupt flows or heighten safety risks.
  • Technological denial: export limits on advanced machinery, software, or key minerals that underpin energy generation or clean-energy development.

Implications for global diplomacy and financial markets

  • Acceleration of diversification: importers react by broadening their supplier base, enlarging LNG terminal capacity, enhancing storage facilities, and securing long-term agreements with alternative providers.
  • Strategic stockpiling: countries bolster their strategic petroleum reserves or mandate minimum gas storage thresholds to soften potential disruptions.
  • Geopolitical realignments: energy partnerships may reinforce alliances or prompt balancing strategies, while suppliers often cultivate political loyalty through favorable financing or infrastructure initiatives.
  • Market volatility and inflation: geopolitical shocks to energy markets spill into consumer costs and broader economic instability, shaping monetary decisions and influencing electoral dynamics.
  • Investment in resilience: ramped-up spending on renewables, grid upgrades, hydrogen, and efficiency measures helps curb long-term exposure, though it can create fresh dependencies, such as reliance on battery minerals.

Emerging trends set to redefine the future of energy geopolitics

  • Liquefied natural gas (LNG) growth: LNG increases flexibility for buyers and weakens pipeline monopolies, but port and regasification infrastructure become new strategic assets.
  • Decarbonization and mineral geopolitics: a shift toward renewables and electric vehicles moves geopolitical competition toward lithium, nickel, cobalt, and rare-earth elements and the countries that process them.
  • Digitalization and cyber risk: greater grid connectivity raises efficiency but also vulnerability to cyber coercion and sabotage.
  • Industrial policy and onshoring: subsidies, tariffs, and public investment in domestic clean-energy manufacturing are used to reduce dependence and exert leverage in global supply chains.
  • Blurring of commercial and strategic actors: state-owned enterprises, national champions, and development banks are used explicitly as instruments of foreign policy in energy projects.

Policy responses and practical mitigations

  • Diversification of suppliers and routes: drawing on varied sources, employing interconnectors, and enabling reverse-flow systems diminishes reliance on any single counterpart.
  • Strategic reserves and demand management: well-timed reserve releases and focused efficiency actions help cushion sudden disruptions.
  • Investment in redundancy and resilience: strengthening grids, enhancing cyber protections, and building backup infrastructure limit the impact of potential assaults.
  • International cooperation and rules: jointly upheld standards for transit security, market openness, and coordinated crisis management narrow opportunities for coercive use.
  • Industrial policy for critical supplies: reinforcing mineral supply chains, expanding recycling, and advancing alternative chemistries curb the emergence of fresh dependencies in the clean-energy transition.

Energy is likely to remain a geopolitical instrument because it lies where strategic needs, unequal resource distribution, and long-term infrastructure decisions converge. Evolving transitions—involving greater LNG use, expanded renewables, advanced batteries, and increasingly digital grids—will reallocate influence rather than erase it, pushing rivalry toward minerals, manufacturing strength, cyber readiness, and financing capacity. Addressing political risks in the energy sphere demands more than market or technical adjustments; it calls for coordinated diplomacy, sustained investments in resilience, and policy decisions that acknowledge energy’s enduring function as both a lever of power and a vulnerability to external pressure.

By Juolie F. Roseberg

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