Opening Plenary "High Level Dialogue: Global Energy Security in a Fragmented World".
• Ricardo Raineri Bernain Past President, IAEE, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile · Chile
• H.E. Paulo Roberto Soares Pacheco Ambassador of Brazil to Chile
• H.E. Kenkō Sone Ambassador of Japan to Chile
• H.E. David Concar Ambassador of the United Kingdom to Chile
• H.E. Brandon Judd Ambassador of the United States to Chile
Description
The 47th IAEE International Conference opens with a landmark diplomatic exchange that sets the strategic tone for discussions on global energy economics. This high-level dialogue convenes senior representatives from leading economies to examine how geopolitical realignments, evolving alliances, and supply chain reconfigurations are fundamentally reshaping the architecture of global energy security.
As energy transitions accelerate amid heightened geopolitical tensions, supply chain vulnerabilities, and the emergence of regional economic blocs, the traditional frameworks for international energy cooperation are under unprecedented stress. Yet energy systems remain inherently interconnected-through trade in fossil fuels and critical minerals, technology supply chains, investment flows, climate commitments, and shared infrastructure. This creates both friction and opportunity: the imperative to maintain stability and manage shared risks even as national priorities increasingly diverge.
This opening dialogue creates a unique platform for diplomatic candor and strategic clarity on the forces reshaping energy geopolitics. Senior officials, ambassadors, and diplomatic leaders representing major energy-consuming economies, resource-rich nations, technology leaders, and emerging markets will address how their countries are adapting energy security strategies to a more fragmented landscape. The discussion will explore where competition is inevitable, where cooperation remains possible, and how energy diplomacy can manage risks that transcend borders-from critical mineral supply concentration to infrastructure resilience, from technology standards to emergency response mechanisms.
This opening session establishes the conference's analytical framework: understanding the economics of energy in 2026 requires honestly grappling with the geopolitics of energy-recognizing fragmentation as reality while identifying spaces for pragmatic coordination that serve mutual interests in stability, affordability, and sustainable development.
Guiding questions / Intended takeaway
In an era of fracturing global consensus, what principles, mechanisms, and institutions can still enable international cooperation on energy security, critical supply chains, and climate objectives-and where must nations accept managed divergence rather than seeking elusive alignment? How are major economies recalibrating their energy security strategies to balance self-reliance with interdependence, and what role can energy diplomacy play in managing shared risks without presuming shared values?
Opening Plenary "High Level Dialogue: Global Energy Security in a Fragmented World".
• Ricardo Raineri Bernain Past President, IAEE, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile · Chile
• H.E. Paulo Roberto Soares Pacheco Ambassador of Brazil to Chile
• H.E. Kenkō Sone Ambassador of Japan to Chile
• H.E. David Concar Ambassador of the United Kingdom to Chile
• H.E. Brandon Judd Ambassador of the United States to Chile
Description
The 47th IAEE International Conference opens with a landmark diplomatic exchange that sets the strategic tone for discussions on global energy economics. This high-level dialogue convenes senior representatives from leading economies to examine how geopolitical realignments, evolving alliances, and supply chain reconfigurations are fundamentally reshaping the architecture of global energy security.
As energy transitions accelerate amid heightened geopolitical tensions, supply chain vulnerabilities, and the emergence of regional economic blocs, the traditional frameworks for international energy cooperation are under unprecedented stress. Yet energy systems remain inherently interconnected-through trade in fossil fuels and critical minerals, technology supply chains, investment flows, climate commitments, and shared infrastructure. This creates both friction and opportunity: the imperative to maintain stability and manage shared risks even as national priorities increasingly diverge.
This opening dialogue creates a unique platform for diplomatic candor and strategic clarity on the forces reshaping energy geopolitics. Senior officials, ambassadors, and diplomatic leaders representing major energy-consuming economies, resource-rich nations, technology le ...
Cardenal Juan Francisco Fresno 47th IAEE International Conference. Bridging Continents, Fueling Progress: Energy Development in a Global Context contact@iaee2026chile.orgTechnical Issues?
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