TY - BOOK AU - Pant,Girijesh TI - India's Emerging Energy Relations: Issues and Challenges T2 - India Studies in Business and Economics, SN - 9788132225034 U1 - 337 23 PY - 2015/// CY - New Delhi PB - Sprnger KW - Economic policy KW - Energy and state KW - Energy policy KW - International economics KW - International Economics KW - Economic Policy KW - Energy Policy, Economics and Management N1 - 1. India's Emerging Energy Relations: Issues and Challenges -- 2. Domestic Constraints to India's Energy Security -- 3. India's Drive for Energy Security and Relations with the US -- 4. Indian Energy Security and the Role of Renewables: Possibility of Cooperation with the EU -- 5. 'Emerging' Energy Power Russia and Energy Security Of India! -- 6. Energy Security and India's Foreign Policy: The Persian Gulf Region -- 7. Geopolitics of Energy Security in Central Asia: Implications for India -- 8. India's Energy Security Imperatives in Africa -- 9. Sourcing Energy From Latin America: Indian Quest for Energy Security -- 10. Energy Transition and the Global Energy Regime: Strategising India's Energy Relations -- 11. Optimising Gains from Emerging Energy Engagements N2 - This book analyzes the role of energy in Indian foreign policy, particularly in defining bilateral relations. It also focuses on the critical gaps in conceptualizing its formulations and recommends a framework for sustainable energy security. India, the fourth largest consumer of oil, is an energy-deficit economy, importing more than eighty percent of its needs. This makes securing energy integral to its foreign policy goals. Obviously it is important for India to actively participate in the global energy market and establish robust, enduring and nuanced diplomatic relations with energy exporting countries. Equally important is that India diversifies its energy mix and moves towards carbon-free growth. Renewable energy is today high on the global energy agenda. Indian energy policy thus has to address a range of issues, domestically and on foreign turf. It has to move beyond the transactional mode by creating equity in the global energy industry. Today, the global energy regime is undergoing fundamental changes, as is the power dynamics of the global energy order. There are now many new producers and diverse consumers. The trade in energy has increased in volume and its direction has shifted from the West to the East, and the ongoing structural changes in the energy market call for a new security architecture. Given the complex and competitive environment of the new geo-economics and geopolitics of energy, the question could well be, should India frame energy issues in conflict mode or move toward innovative cooperation? In either case the message is that India needs an integrated energy security policy ER -