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Global Security and Counter-Terrorism Discussed in Brussels

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  • Global Security and Counter-Terrorism Discussed in Brussels

    AZG Armenian Daily #052, 23/03/2006


    Conference

    GLOBAL SECURITY AND COUNTER-TERRORISM DISCUSSED IN BRUSSELS

    Armen Sarkissian speaks at Worldwide Security Conference

    BRUSSELS -- More than 400 civic leaders, policymakers, experts and
    delegates from around the world gathered in Brussels during the last
    week of February for the annual Worldwide Security Conference,
    organized by the East West Institute in partnership with the Russian
    Foreign Ministry and the World Customs Organization.

    Speakers and panels focused on a host of critical issues facing the
    world today - from global responses to international terrorism, to
    security infrastructures, the role of technology in security and
    protection mechanisms, to prevention, civil protection, and energy
    security.

    Conference speakers included the President of European Commission Jose
    Manuel Barroso, former Prime Minster of Canada Kim Campbell, Secretary
    General of World Customs Organization Michel Danet, Head of
    Anti-Terroist Centre of CIS Boris Mylnikov, Russian President's
    Special Representative Anatoly Safonov, Chinese Foreign Ministry
    Director General for Security Gao Jian, Russian Camber of Commerce and
    Industry President Evgeny Primakov, US Ambassador to the European
    Union C. Boyden Gray, and many other leading figures in government and
    world security issues.

    Armen Sarkissian, former Prime Minister of Armenia and currently
    advisor to global energy and telecom corporations, spoke at the
    three-day conference and chaired a panel on energy security. The panel
    discussed several key issues, including ways of balancing supply and
    demand on the one hand and protection and security of infrastructure
    on the other; the role of China and India and the various scenarios of
    cooperation with these vast energy consuming countries.

    In his address, Sarkissian emphasized the urgency of devising common
    security goals by the international community and the significance of
    a strategy of energy diversification in coming years.

    "The era of easy oil has indeed ended", said Sarkissian. He explained
    that economic developments in India and China have led to an increased
    demand for oil and contributed to the upward trend of prices. Whereas
    in 1990 China accounted for only 3.5 percent of the worlds crude oil
    demand, in 2004 it had increased to 9 percent. Sarkissian underlined
    that in the last five years, the oil demand of the two most populous
    countries in the world has grown at 8.8 percent in China and 4.5
    percent in India. He contrasted these rates with growth in the world
    in the same period which stood at 1.6 percent.

    One obvious trend in the world is that certain oil producing countries
    in the past are becoming consumers themselves. China, which has become
    a net oil importer since 1993, is currently the second largest
    consumer of oil, after the US. "Diversification and the search for new
    sources of energy are increasingly crucial for energy security" stated
    Sarkissian, adding that "the search and struggle for energy resources
    will have significant influence on global security issues in the
    coming decades".
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