Sigurnost snabdevanja tržišta energenata kao pravnopolitička paradigma regulatornog okvira
Author
Dimitrijević, Žarko P.Mentor
Cvetković, Predrag N.Committee members
Ćirić, Aleksandar Lj.Vukadinović, Radovan

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Modern countries strive to adapt their legal systems to the new tendencies in
the energy market in the best possible way. On the grounds of uneven geographical
(both regional and continental) distribution of energy resources, as well as the limits
of exploitation of some of them (both renewable and non-renewable), contemporary
countries are divided into those that predominantly produce and those that
predominantly consume energy. The balance between the supply of the producing
countriesand the demand of the consuming countries determines the energy prices in
the international market.
The subject of this paper is the analysis of impact of circumstances other than
those governed by the economic laws of the energy market on the aforementioned
balance, those circumstances being: political pressure, market cartels and oligopoly,
as well as the examination of bureaucratic obstacles which affect energy market laws.
The survey includes key relations that producing countries and consuming
count...ries have with the countries that distribute energy substances (transit countries).
The strategic significance of energetics points to the need to secure the supply
by means of several instruments: 1) harmonisation of laws with the view to defining
rights and obligations of the participants in the energy market, together with
determining the means of settling disputes, as the single most important instrument
that is the ground for discord of two opposing sides – the supporters of the Energy
Charter and those who advocate the extended implementation of the charter within the
framework of WTO rules; and 2) standardisation and energy efficiency with the view
to reducing the demand in the market, which are opposed by the rebound effect. The
rebound effect is counterbalanced by the environment protection that can be
controlled and stimulated by means of several legal instruments.
As the energy market is an integrated system, disturbances in one region or
even in just one country affect the functionality of global energy supply. Therefore, a
national market cannot be efficiently secured without stable legal regulation of
international legal framework for energy supply, based on the need for prevention of
creationof new and/or elimination of the existent interruptions in the energy supply.
As a member of the European energy community, the Republic of Serbia
continuously harmonises its rules and regulations with those of the EU, which is
together with Russia its most valuable energy partner.