Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Foreword
- Foreword
- The Contributors
- Introdution
- 1 Oil and Gas Pricing Policies in India
- 2 India's New Foreign Policy: The Journey from Moral Non-Alignment to the Nuclear Deal
- 3 Regional Integration in South Asia and Energy Cooperation: Opportunities and Challenges
- 4 Pakistan's Energy Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities
- 5 Energy Security and Geopolitics in South Asia: Historical Baggage, Global Powers, and Rational Choice
- 6 Energy Cooperation between India and Bangladesh: Economics and Geopolitics
- 7 Sino-Indian Energy Politics
- 8 Linkages in Urban and Energy Policies: An Analysis of China and India
- 9 Strategic Petroleum Reserves in China and India
- 10 New Partnerships in Energy in Asia between India, Japan, and Singapore
- 11 The Geopolitics of Energy in India: Implications for Southeast Asia
- Concluding Remarks: The Context for India's Energy Geopolitics
- Index
11 - The Geopolitics of Energy in India: Implications for Southeast Asia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Foreword
- Foreword
- The Contributors
- Introdution
- 1 Oil and Gas Pricing Policies in India
- 2 India's New Foreign Policy: The Journey from Moral Non-Alignment to the Nuclear Deal
- 3 Regional Integration in South Asia and Energy Cooperation: Opportunities and Challenges
- 4 Pakistan's Energy Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities
- 5 Energy Security and Geopolitics in South Asia: Historical Baggage, Global Powers, and Rational Choice
- 6 Energy Cooperation between India and Bangladesh: Economics and Geopolitics
- 7 Sino-Indian Energy Politics
- 8 Linkages in Urban and Energy Policies: An Analysis of China and India
- 9 Strategic Petroleum Reserves in China and India
- 10 New Partnerships in Energy in Asia between India, Japan, and Singapore
- 11 The Geopolitics of Energy in India: Implications for Southeast Asia
- Concluding Remarks: The Context for India's Energy Geopolitics
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Politically unstable and almost on the verge of default in 1991, India's minority government was forced to introduce economic reforms under the supervision of the then Finance Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh. The road has been treacherous and after about fifteen years the situation has radically changed. The economy, foreign exchange reserves, and energy demands are growing. However due to inherent limitations of coalition politics the successive governments have not been able to accelerate reforms in parliament. Coincidentally, Dr Manmohan Singh is Prime Minister of India since 2004. India, the home of over 1.1 billion people, has emerged as one of the economic giants in Asia in recent years.
India's Energy Policy is shaped by various ministries and departments such as Petroleum and Natural Gas, Power (State and Central), Coal, Atomic Energy Commission, New and Renewable Energy, Shipping and Transport, and Environment and the Planning Commission. The general observation is that these ministries and departments function quite independently, politically.
It is very time consuming for governments and organizations in Southeast Asia to deal with various ministries and departments. However, some would argue that knowing your niche area would help you deal directly with the respective ministry or department. Recently, the Prime Minister of India has formed a coordination committee to address these and related issues and to streamline policies, including investment policies, in various energy sectors.
Many experts have warned that unless India takes urgent measures for infrastructural developments, high economic growth is less likely to be sustainable in the long term. The energy sector is dominating infrastructural developments and one of the critical concerns for the government is the geopolitics of energy security. This chapter will focus on the geopolitics of energy in India and its implications for Southeast Asia.
ENERGY SECURITY
Energy security is understood and interpreted in different ways by planners, academics, and industries. According to R.S. Pathy, Energy Security deals with (a) guaranteeing fuel supplies at affordable prices;
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- Information
- The Geopolitics of Energy in South Asia , pp. 223 - 242Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2008