
This monograph examines the relationship between treaties providing for uninterrupted energy transit and countermeasures under the law of international responsibility. It analyses the obligations governing energy transit through pipelines in multilateral and bilateral treaties, looking at the WTO Agreement, the Energy Charter Treaty, and sixteen bespoke pipeline treaties. It argues that a number of transit obligations under these treaties are indivisible, reflecting the collective interests of states parties. The analysis is placed in the historical and normative landscape of freedom of transit in international law. After setting out the content and scope of obligations concerning transit of energy, it distinguishes countermeasures from treaty law responses, and examines the dispute settlement and compliance supervision provisions in these treaties. Building on these findings, the work discusses the availability and lawfulness of countermeasures as, on the one hand, a means of implementing the transit states responsibility for interruptions of energy transit via pipelines; and, on the other hand, circumstances that preclude the wrongfulness of the transit states interruptions of transit.
This monograph investigates the legal intersection between international obligations for uninterrupted energy transit and the application of countermeasures under the law of international responsibility. Dr. Danae Azaria, an expert in international law, utilizes a comparative analysis of multilateral and bilateral frameworks to evaluate how states manage energy transit interruptions. The work posits that specific transit obligations are indivisible and reflect collective state interests, challenging traditional interpretations of treaty-based responses.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and practitioners identify this work as a rigorous contribution to the study of international responsibility and energy security. Readers frequently note the high level of technical detail and the precise application of treaty law to complex geopolitical scenarios.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191026875
ISBN-13:
9780191026874
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