Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Global Opportunities

 Click Here for more Info ....In regard to energy, the EU might benefit from having an independent commission take a fresh look at the shale revolution, and its potential risks and rewards in Europe. 

Could European countries produce appreciable quantities of shale gas and oil at an acceptable risk? Another aspect worth examining anew is shale’s impact on the pace of commercialization of renewable energy sources. A successful US-EU Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership permitting American energy exports amid a growing global LNG market could greatly benefit European energy security. 

One area where greater US-EU dialogue could result in greater leverage for both is in regard to the global commons. There is an urgency to design new rules, norms and codes of conduct in the realms of the future of cyberspace, the Arctic, and outer space. In particular, the gradual thawing of the Arctic resulting from climate change is beginning to raise a whole set of issues—both environmental and economic—that will require shaping new international rules and norms over the coming generation and beyond. 

Transatlantic collaboration on the Arctic will be critical. The Arctic Council, with a relevant set of actors, may be an important venue to begin a coordinated effort to shape a global consensus. Here, too, the Nordic countries may have an opportunity to shape a common transatlantic approach that could pay dividends. In any case, the Arctic should increasingly be a focus of US-EU dialogue. 

Within Europe, there are a number of areas where both the EU and particular European states outside the Eurozone and NATO could carve distinct or niche roles: 

  • The Nordic countries and the Baltic states could have an impact on economic modernization in northwest Russia through interactions that incentivize best practices in business and finance; 
  • The Nordic countries may also be able to play a mediating role in Russia’s relations with the West; and 
  • Lastly, non-NATO states may enhance bilateral military-to-military ties with the United States, building on, for example, Sweden’s experience in Afghanistan.

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