1st Edition

China’s Search for Energy Security Domestic Sources and International Implications

Edited By Suisheng Zhao Copyright 2013
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    China’s rapid economic growth in the recent decades has produced an unprecedented energy vulnerability that could threaten the sustainability of its economic development, a linchpin to social stability and ultimately the regime legitimacy of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) as well as the foundation for China's rising power aspirations. What is the Chinese perception of the energy security and challenges, how has the Chinese government responded to the challenges? What are the international implications of China’s search for energy security?

    This collection of contributions by leading scholars seeks answers to these extremely important questions. The book is divided into three parts. Part I presents an overview of China’s sense of energy security and its strategic responses. Part II examines China’s energy policy-making processes, the efforts to reform and reorganize the energy sector and reset policy priorities Part III focuses on the international implications of China’s search for energy security.

    This book consists of articles published in the Journal of Contemporary China.

    Part I Overview: China’s Energy Security and Challenges  1. A Chinese View of China’s Energy Security  2. A Crisis is Looming: China’s Energy Challenge in the Eyes of University Students  Part II In the Search for Energy Security: Domestic Sources  3. Shaping China’s Energy Policy: Actors and processes  4. China’s energy decision-making: becoming more like the United States?  5.Energy production and social marginalization in China  6. Hydropower Development and Resettlement Policy on China’s Nu River  Part III In the Search for Energy Security: International Implications  7. China's Global Search for Energy Security: Cooperation and Competition in Asia-Pacific  8. Energy Insecurity with Chinese and American Characteristics: Implications for Sino-American Relations  9. China’s Diplomatic Maneuvering on the Question of Darfur  10. China’s oil hunger in Angola: history and perspective

    Biography

    Suisheng Zhao is Professor and Director of the Center for China-US Cooperation at Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver. A founding editor of the Journal of Contemporary China, he is the author and editor of more than a dozen books.

    'The merits of China's search for energy security lie not only in the unique and fresh perspective it takes in investigating China's domestic and international policy through the lens of energy, but also in the carefully selected and well-structured chapters bt several authorities in the field. This book is a must-read for any scholar, student, policy-maker or member of the general public who seeks to understand China's present and future energy policy and its domestic and global implications.'

    Kai Sun, Ocean University of China