Practical information
New perspectives are opening in Central and Eastern Europe. The region needs to assert a new geopolitical dimension, while reducing its energy dependency. What choices will these countries have to make to adapt their energy policies, and consolidate their role in the Energy Union?
The Energy Union communication reasserts the role of Central and Eastern European countries in EU energy policy. Through the Energy Community, this region has become key to the objective of enforcing the third energy package rules, while refocusing EU energy policy on security of supply.
In addition to the uncertainty related to large gas pipeline projects and contrasted electricity interconnections, the Central and Eastern European region needs to consolidate a new geopolitical role and reduce its external energy import dependency. What choices will the region have to make? To what extent existing regulatory frameworks in the different countries need to be adapted?
Speakers
Mantas Bartuška, CEO and General Manager, Klaipėdos nafta, Lithuania
Dirk Buschle, Deputy Director, Energy Community Secretariat
Bogdan Janicki, Senior Advisor to the CEO, Central Europe Energy Partners
Hans Van Steen, Head of Unit, International Relations and Enlargement, DG Energy, European Commission
Chaired by
Marie-Claire Aoun, Director, Center for Energy, Ifri
Other events
Nuclear Sharing in Europe: A Contested Policy That Endures
Since the end of the Cold War, the number of US nuclear weapons stationed in Europe has fallen more than seventy-fold, yet their presence in Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Turkey remains a quiet pillar of NATO's deterrence posture. This "nuclear sharing" arrangement, central to the Alliance since its founding, has long been contested by public opinion, political parties, and civil society across Europe, without ever being abandoned by host governments. This paradox lies at the heart of the seminar: why does such an unpopular policy persist?