The Ukraine crisis has made Europeans see Greek foreign policy as particularly threatening and divisive. In reality, Greece is simply acting in line with its long-standing political traditions. The question of European unity still lies in the hands of Brussels and Berlin.
The politics of raising fuel taxes and simultaneously giving American households an income tax break may be impractical, but the economic logic of doing so remains compelling.
It will take Iran a long time to make up the ground it has lost in the South Caucasus since the end of the Soviet Union.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras travels to Moscow on April 8 desperate to win concessions over cheap energy and to play Russia off against Germany. Will he succeed?
From Russia to your local gas station, the consequences of low fuel prices are clear. But the consequences of those consequences are less apparent.
Lebanon should design an energy production strategy that allows it to achieve its wider objectives while taking into consideration its own specific conditions, such as geology, availability of infrastructure, and the domestic market.
The EU and the United States should focus more attention on how to include energy issues in the proposed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership.
The 2015 Carnegie International Nuclear Policy Conference brought together over 800 experts and officials from more than 45 countries and international organizations to discuss emerging trends in nuclear nonproliferation, disarmament, deterrence, and nuclear energy.
It is the European Commission’s competition arm, not European leaders, that is behind Gazprom’s waning hold on Europe’s energy sector.
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace hosted a discussion on transatlantic energy security.