The Geopolitics of Energy: A Constant Factor

Why energy keeps getting used as a geopolitical tool

Energy extends far beyond fuel and electricity, serving as the foundation for industry, transportation, household well-being, and military strength. Because of this central role, it becomes a particularly powerful instrument in international affairs. Governments, corporations, and nonstate actors leverage supply, pricing, infrastructure, regulation, and technological oversight to pursue strategic objectives. This behavior endures due to four persistent factors: the uneven global distribution of resources, the long lifespan of infrastructure and contractual arrangements, the rapid economic strain caused by supply disruptions, and the wide-ranging ripple effects on alliances and domestic political dynamics.

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.

Historical and contemporary cases

  • 1973 oil embargo: Arab producers imposed an embargo that dramatically raised oil prices and reshaped Western foreign policy for decades, demonstrating how resource restraint can achieve political aims.
  • Russia–Ukraine gas disputes (2006, 2009, 2014–2022): repeated interruptions in gas deliveries and pricing disputes illustrated transit-state vulnerability and prompted Europe to diversify supplies and invest in storage and LNG capacity. Prior to 2022, Russia supplied roughly 40% of the European Union’s pipeline gas needs; sudden reductions in 2021–2022 triggered emergency measures across Europe.
  • OPEC and OPEC+ coordination: production quotas and decisions by Saudi Arabia and, since 2016, coordinated action with Russia (OPEC+) have been used to support prices or respond to market shocks. The 2020 Saudi–Russia price war briefly crashed prices, then coordinated cuts stabilized markets.
  • Sanctions on Iran and Venezuela: U.S. sanctions curtailed oil exports from both countries, tightening global markets and showing how financial measures alter energy availability and actor behavior without direct military action.
  • Colonial Pipeline ransomware (2021) and Ukrainian grid cyberattacks (2015–2016): cyber incidents revealed that nonkinetic attacks on energy systems can cause large economic and political effects, from retail fuel shortages to civilian hardship.
  • Power of Siberia and broader Russia–China energy deals: long-term gas and oil contracts demonstrate how energy agreements forge geopolitical alignments and create long-term interdependence and influence.
  • Supply-chain leverage for green technologies: China’s dominance in solar panel manufacturing and much of the battery-material and processing chain creates leverage in a decarbonizing world; export restrictions or production shifts can ripple through global clean-energy rollouts.

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.

How energy weaponization is implemented

  • Direct export cuts or embargoes: stopping deliveries, levying transit fees, or redirecting shipments to political allies.
  • Production management: OPEC+ quotas or production strategies by major state-owned companies that influence global prices.
  • Legal and financial measures: sanctions targeting tankers, insurers, banks, or investment channels to throttle a state’s ability to export energy.
  • Infrastructure operations: slowing customs, delaying pipeline maintenance, or using port control to interfere with shipments.
  • Cyberattacks and sabotage: targeting control systems, pumping stations, or terminals to interrupt flows or raise safety concerns.
  • Technological denial: export controls on high-end equipment, software, or critical minerals that are essential for energy production or clean-energy transitions.

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 that will reshape energy geopolitics

  • Liquefied natural gas (LNG) growth: LNG broadens buyers’ options and diminishes the dominance of pipeline suppliers, while turning port terminals and regasification facilities into pivotal strategic hubs.
  • Decarbonization and mineral geopolitics: the pivot toward renewable power and electric mobility redirects geopolitical rivalry toward lithium, nickel, cobalt, and rare-earth elements, along with the nations that refine them.
  • Digitalization and cyber risk: enhanced grid interconnection improves performance yet heightens exposure to cyber pressure and disruptive attacks.
  • Industrial policy and onshoring: incentives, trade barriers, and state-backed funding for local clean-energy production are deployed to curb reliance and strengthen influence across global supply networks.
  • Blurring of commercial and strategic actors: state-owned enterprises, flagship firms, and development finance institutions are leveraged directly as tools of foreign policy in energy initiatives.

Policy actions and real-world mitigation strategies

  • 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 will continue to be used as a geopolitical tool because it sits at the intersection of strategic necessity, uneven geography, and long-term infrastructure commitments. Transition dynamics—more LNG, renewables, batteries, and digitized grids—will redistribute leverage rather than eliminate it, shifting competition toward minerals, manufacturing capacity, cyber resilience, and financing. Managing the political risks of energy requires not only market and technical fixes but coordinated diplomacy, investment in resilience, and policy choices that recognize energy’s persistent role as both a source of power and a target of leverage.

By Kevin Wayne

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