Abbreviations AAN Archiwum Akt Nowych AMSZ Archiwum Ministerstwa Spraw Zagranicznych ARM Archiwum Rady Ministrów BArch Bundesarchiv BBC British Broadcasting Corporation bcm billion cubic
Trang 1Falk Flade
Energy Infrastructures
in the Eastern Bloc
Poland and the Construction of Transnational Electricity, Oil, and Gas Systems
Trang 2
Falk FladeEnergy Infrastructures in the Eastern Bloc
Trang 3Harrassowitz Verlag Wiesbaden
Studien zur Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte Ostmitteleuropas
Herausgegeben von Werner Benecke, Christoph Boyer, Ulf Brunnbauer, Uwe Müller, Alexander Nützenadel und Philipp Ther
Band 26
Trang 4Falk Flade
Energy Infrastructures
in the Eastern Bloc
Poland and the Construction of Transnational Electricity,
Oil, and Gas Systems
2017
Trang 5Ostmitteleuropas«, whose volumes 1–16 have been published in the Berliner
Wissen-schaftsverlag
Scientific Advisory Board:
Roman Holec, Jerzy Kochanowski, Claudia Kraft, Rudolf Kučera, Torsten Lorenz, Ágnes Pogány, Béla Tomka, Hans-Jürgen Wagener
All volumes of the series go through a peer-review process
Cover Illustration:
Left side: Worker of the construction company Energopol at the Polish section of the So͡iuz gas pipeline near Kharkov in eastern Ukraine, 1976 © Polska Agencja Prasowa/Mariusz Szyperko
Right side: View of the Druzhba pipeline and the power transmission line Mir in the Zakarpattia region, 1965 © Polska Agencja Prasowa/ITAR-TASS
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ISSN 1867-6596
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e-ISBN 978-3-447-19676-5
Trang 6for Inna
Trang 7© 2017, Otto Harrassowitz GmbH & Co KG, Wiesbaden ISBN Print: 978-3-447-10904-8 - ISBN E-Book: 978-3-447-19676-5
Trang 8Content
Figures and tables 7
Abbreviations 9
Acknowledgement 13
1 Introduction 15
1.1 Prolog 15
1.2 Object of study 18
1.3 Literature overview 20
1.4 Research questions and theses 24
1.5 Methods and sources 26
1.6 Theoretical approach 27
1.6.1 Large Technological Systems 27
1.6.2 Critical assessment 34
1.6.3 Applied concepts 35
1.7 Outline 37
2 Energy infrastructures in pre-war Poland 38
2.1 The heritage of the Galician oil industry 38
2.2 Plans and endeavors in the 1920s 40
2.3 The Central Industrial District 42
2.4 Summary 46
3 Initiating cross-border energy infrastructures 47
3.1 Historical background 47
3.1.1 Implementation of planned economies 48
3.1.2 Modes of cooperation during post-war Stalinism 49
3.1.3 The Marshall Plan and the foundation of the CMEA 51
3.2 The beginning of cross-border cooperation 54
3.2.1 The energy-hungry Hungarian aluminum industry 54
3.2.2 Negotiating four-sided electricity deliveries 55
3.2.3 The pricing debate 57
3.3 The Standing Commission for Electric Energy 59
3.3.1 Gidroproektʼs proposal 62
3.3.2 Teploėlektroproekt’s proposal 64
3.4 The electricity network Mir 66
3.4.1 The Central Dispatching Organization 68
3.4.2 The electricity hub Mukachevo 70
3.4.3 Early plans for East-West electricity deliveries 71
3.5 Summary 72
Trang 94 The Druzhba oil pipeline 75
4.1 Changing energy consumption in Eastern Europe 75
4.1.1 The chemicalization campaign 76
4.1.2 Oil import forecasts and the transport question 77
4.2 Pipeline construction 80
4.2.1 The planning procedure 80
4.2.2 Construction work 84
4.2.3 Western obstruction 89
4.2.4 Consequences of the Druzhba pipeline 93
4.3 Extending the pipeline network 96
4.3.1 The second Druzhba pipeline 97
4.3.2 Plans for additional in- and outlets 101
4.4 Summary 103
5 The Soi͡uz gas pipeline 106
5.1 The Complex Program 106
5.2 Soi͡uz as a flagship project? 109
5.2.1 Posting of workforce 113
5.2.2 Joint purchases of Western products 120
5.2.3 The International Investment Bank 122
5.2.4 Repercussions of the Polish debt crisis 127
5.3 Further system growth without integration 130
5.4 Summary 132
6 Stagnation in the East European nuclear energy sector 135
6.1 Impacts of the oil crises 135
6.1.1 Excursus: the discussion about Soviet subsidization 141
6.2 Ambitious plans for the electricity network Mir 143
6.2.1 New institutions and agreements 143
6.2.2 The General Scheme for the Long-Term Development of Mir 147
6.2.3 Joint construction of the NPP Khmeľnit͡skiĭ 153
6.3 The “NPP Żarnowiec under construction” 158
6.3.1 Initial plans for a Polish NPP 158
6.3.2 Crumbling cross-border supply chains 160
6.3.3 The Chernobyl disaster 163
6.3.4 Growing counterculture 165
6.3.5 The end of the “NPP Żarnowiec under construction” 170
6.4 Summary 172
7 Impacts of changing institutional frameworks 175
7.1 Electricity sector 175
7.1.1 Transition from Mir to ENTSO-E 176
7.1.2 Nuclear plans in Poland 179
7.2 Gas sector 185
7.2.1 Supply security versus transport autarky 186
7.2.2 The post-socialist gas infrastructure 189
© 2017, Otto Harrassowitz GmbH & Co KG, Wiesbaden ISBN Print: 978-3-447-10904-8 - ISBN E-Book: 978-3-447-19676-5
Trang 10Content 5
7.3 Oil sector 194
7.3.1 Diversification attempts despite low vulnerability 195
7.3.2 The Druzhba pipeline: worn out or indispensable? 196
7.4 Summary 198
8 Conclusion 200
9 Color plates 209
10 Bibliography 216
10.1 Archival sources 216
10.2 Interviews 217
10.3 Official documents 217
10.4 Web-published material 217
10.5 Secondary literature 218
11 Index 231
Trang 11ISBN Print: 978-3-447-10904-8 - ISBN E-Book: 978-3-447-19676-5
Trang 12Figures and tables
1.1: Polish import dependency on oil and gas (1990–2018) 17
1.2: Polish gas imports from Russia (1990–2014) 18
2.1: Planned 150 kV electricity network in COP (1937) 43
2.2: Gas pipeline network in COP (1939) 45
3.1: Electricity deficit of the Hungarian aluminum industry (1956–60) 56
3.2: Cross-border transmission lines between CMEA countries (1960) 209
3.3: Electricity consumption of CMEA countries (1955–65) 61
3.4: Saving potential of a unified electricity network (1959) 67
3.5: Intrabloc electricity deliveries (1962) 69
3.6: Cross-border transmission lines between CMEA countries (1967) 210
4.1: Planned oil imports of CMEA countries from the Soviet Union (1957–60) 77
4.2: Oil import demands of CMEA countries from the Soviet Union (1960–75) 78
4.3: The Druzhba oil pipeline (1964) 211
4.4: Planned oil imports through the Druzhba pipeline (1962–75) 82
4.5: Cost estimates for the Druzhba pipeline (1959) 83
4.6: Planned pipe supplies for the section Kuĭbyshev-Mozyr’ (1959) 85
4.7: Construction costs of the Druzhba pipeline (1964) 95
4.8: Forms of transport of Polish oil imports (1968–75) 97
4.9: Oil transport through the Druzhba pipeline (1970–75) 100
4.10: The extended Druzhba pipeline system (1975) 211
4.11: Share of Soviet crude oil exports to CMEA countries (1960–89) 105
5.1: The Soi͡uz gas pipeline (1979) 212
5.2: Sections of the Soi͡uz gas pipeline (1975) 212
5.3: Energopol’s engagement in the Soviet Union (1975–85) 117
5.4: Number of employees in the Soi͡uz project (1977) 119
5.5: Polish share of total construction costs of the Soi͡uz pipeline (1981) 124
5.6: Credits raised by the IIB for the Soi͡uz project (1978) 125
5.7: Soviet share of oil and gas supplies to CMEA countries (1973–80) 134
5.8: Energy self-sufficiency of CMEA countries (1950–78) 134
6.1: Soviet gas import prices (1973–77) 138
6.2: World market and intrabloc crude oil prices (1972–82) 140
6.3: Key numbers of the Polish energy system (1960–90) 148
6.4: Planned nuclear power production capacity in CMEA countries (1976–90) 149
6.5: Projected 750 kV network of the Mir electricity grid (1990) 213
Trang 136.6: Financial assessment of Mir network (1975) 150
6.7: Electricity exchange between CMEA and neighboring countries (1981) 214
6.8: Share of nuclear energy in CMEA countries (1970–90) 151
6.9: Polish contributions to the Khmeľnit͡skiĭ NPP (1979–85) 154
6.10: Key numbers of planned NPPs in Poland (1985–2000) 159
6.11: Scheme of a NPP with VVER technology 215
7.1: Energy intensity in EU and CEE countries (1992–98) 176
7.2: Attitude towards NPPs in Poland (1987–2013) 181
7.3: Government targets for nuclear energy (2010–35) 183
7.4: Projected Polish energy mix (2030) 184
7.5: Energy import dependency in Poland and Germany (1995–2013) 186
7.6: Capacity of gas pipelines from Russia (2015) 189
7.7: Oil imports of Visegrád countries through the Druzhba pipeline (2012) 197
8.1: Poland’s transnational cooperation regarding energy infrastructures 208
© 2017, Otto Harrassowitz GmbH & Co KG, Wiesbaden ISBN Print: 978-3-447-10904-8 - ISBN E-Book: 978-3-447-19676-5
Trang 14Abbreviations
AAN Archiwum Akt Nowych
AMSZ Archiwum Ministerstwa Spraw Zagranicznych
ARM Archiwum Rady Ministrów
BArch Bundesarchiv
BBC British Broadcasting Corporation
bcm billion cubic meters
BEMIP Baltic Energy Market Interconnection Plan
BPS Baltic Pipeline System
CBOS Centrum Badania Opinii Społecznej
CDO Central Dispatching Organization
CEE Central and Eastern Europe
CIGRÉ Conseil International des Grands Réseaux Électriques
CIS Commonwealth of Independent States
CMEA Council of Mutual Economic Aid
CoCom Coordinating Committee for East-West Trade Policy
ComInform Communist Information Bureau
COP Centralny Okręg Przemysłowy
CPSU Communist Party of the Soviet Union
DIN Deutsches Institut für Normung
EBRD European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
EC European Commission
ECT Energy Charter Treaty
ENTSO-E European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity ENTSO-G European Network of Transmission System Operators for Gas
EU European Union
FDJ Freie Deutsche Jugend
FSRU Floating Storage Regasification Unit
GARF Gosudarstvennyĭ Arkhiv Rossiĭskoĭ Federat͡sii
GDP Gross Domestic Product
GDR German Democratic Republic
GIPL Gas Interconnection Poland-Lithuania
GKĖS Gosudarstvennyĭ Komitet po Vneshnim Ėkonomicheskim Svi͡azi͡am Glavgaz Glavnoe Upravlenie Gazovoĭ Promyshlennosti
GNP Gross National Product
GOĖLRO Gosudarstvennai͡a Komissii͡a po Ėlektrifikat͡sii Rossii
GOST Gosudarstvennyĭ Standart
GWh gigawatt hours
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency
i.e id est
Trang 15IEA International Energy Agency
IIB International Investment Bank
ISO International Organization for Standardization
km kilometer
kV kilovolt
kWh kilowatt hour
LIBOR London Interbank Offered Rate
LNG Liquefied Natural Gas
LTS Large Technological System
m meter
Minėnergo Ministerstvo Ėnergetiki i Ėlektrifikat͡sii
Mingazprom Ministerstvo Gazovoĭ Promyshlennosti
Minneftegazstroĭ Ministerstvo Stroiteľstva Predprii͡atiĭ Nefti͡anoĭ i Gazovoĭ
Promyshlennosti
mm millimeter
MW Megawatt
NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization
NEL Nordeuropäische Erdgasleitung
NPP Nuclear Power Plant
OAPEC Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries
OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
OEEC Organisation for European Economic Co-operation
OPAL Ostsee-Pipeline-Anbindungsleitung
OSZhD Organizat͡sii͡a Sotrudnichestva Zheleznykh Dorog
PCI Project of Common Interest
PERN Przedsiębiorstwo Eksploatacji Rurociągów Naftowych
PGE Polska Grupa Energetyczna
PGNiG Polskie Górnictwo Naftowe i Gazowe
PiS Prawo i Sprawiedliwość
PO Platforma Obywatelska
PSE Polskie Sieci Elektroenergetyczne
PZPR Polska Zjednoczona Partia Robotnicza
RBMK Reaktor Boľshoĭ Moshchnosti Kanaľnyĭ
REPCO Russian Export Blend Crude Oil
RGAE Rossiĭskiĭ Gosudarstvennyĭ Arkhiv Ėkonomiki
SED Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands
SLD Sojusz Lewicy Demokratycznej
TEN-E Trans-European Energy Network
TPA Third Party Access
UNECE United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
© 2017, Otto Harrassowitz GmbH & Co KG, Wiesbaden ISBN Print: 978-3-447-10904-8 - ISBN E-Book: 978-3-447-19676-5
Trang 16Abbreviations 11
UNIPEDE International Union of Producers of Electrical Energy
US United States
VVER Vodo-Vodi͡anoĭ Ėnergeticheskiĭ Reaktor
WiP Wolność i Pokój
ZMS Związek Młodzieży Socjalistycznej
Trang 17ISBN Print: 978-3-447-10904-8 - ISBN E-Book: 978-3-447-19676-5
Trang 18Acknowledgement
Working on a PhD project over the course of almost five years has brought me in contact with a broad range of different people Some of these contacts were temporary, others will hopefully last for the rest of my life These people supported the project in a practical or intellectual way in working groups and archives, at conferences and workshops
My supervisor Dagmara Jajeśniak-Quast had the largest influence on my PhD project She turned my attention to energy history, which became my own hobbyhorse in the following years In addition, I largely benefited from her extensive scientific network The reviewer of this work, Heiko Pleines, helped me to improve important aspects of my study thanks to his constructive criticism
As a member of a doctoral college, I profited from regular colloquia, field trips as well as the exchange with my fellow doctoral candidates Although all of them had their own disciplinary focuses, there was always the opportunity to discuss the advantages and pitfalls
of our lives as PhD students This is true especially for Anna Maria Steinkamp as well as Hanna Malik, with whom I shared a study room Jonas Grygier’s hospitality and permanent readiness to help facilitated my start as a PhD student The Hanns Seidel Foundation provided all of us in an uncomplicated manner with the necessary long-term scholarships
This study would not have been possible without archive stays in Warsaw and Moscow Next to conference trips all over Europe, these visits formed the most interesting part of my research Thanks to grants from the local German Historical Institutes, I was able to work and live in these capitals for several months My respective supervisors Jens Boysen (Warsaw) and Matthias Uhl (Moscow) provided me with helpful information about the func-tioning of local archives Without this information, I probably would not have found important sources, although archive employees were helpful everywhere The German His-torical Institutes’ staff gave practical support regarding administrational issues and housing
I appreciate the readiness of my private hosts in Moscow and Warsaw to share their flats with strangers like me
Furthermore, I would like to thank other scholars, who supported my PhD project Jürgen Wagener commented in detail on the entire study The realization of some of these points further improved the quality of this book Vincent Lagendijk gave helpful feedback
Hans-on my theory chapter Łukasz Dwilewicz provided me with fast and competent answers Hans-on details concerning Polish energy history Lorenz Lüthi generously shared valuable archive material with me Jeronim Perović gave helpful comments, which improved the chapter regarding the Druzhba pipeline Philipp Zessin-Jurek supported me with his overall insights
in the field of scientific work I am also grateful to Paweł Bożyk as well as Andrzej Karpiński, both of whom agreed to share their wealth of experience with me in the form of telephone interviews
Moreover, I would like to thank the staff of the Center for Interdisciplinary Polish Studies, which became an inspiring working environment for me My thanks to my former colleagues
Trang 19in the pol-int project, especially to Dorothea Traupe and Andrzej Ceglarz for their ment and kindness I am also grateful to the then head of the Hannah Arendt Institute, Günther Heydemann as well as Hannelore Georgi for their initial support to get my PhD project started
engage-Finally, I would like to thank the publisher for accepting my work The publication was generously supported by a grant of the Viadrina International Program for Graduates
I dedicate this book to my wife
outcome of this endeavor
Falk Flade Frankfurt (Oder), August 2017
© 2017, Otto Harrassowitz GmbH & Co KG, Wiesbaden ISBN Print: 978-3-447-10904-8 - ISBN E-Book: 978-3-447-19676-5
Trang 201 Introduction
This study covers a time range spanning from the late 19th century to the latest developments
in the European energy sector Of particular interest is the socialist period The following
chapter will introduce the reader to the overall idea of this work Special attention will be
paid to both the subject and the research approach The general aim is to illustrate the
topi-cality of this study as well as the applied working methods
1.1 Prolog
Energy dependency has been on top of the political agenda in Poland for more than a decade
This is true not only for the Polish energy policy but for Polish politics in general
Govern-ments formed by the political parties Prawo i Sprawiedliwości (PiS) as well as Platforma
Obywatelska (PO) highlighted the dangers arising from energy dependency.1 Standpoints
differed insignificantly and mainly referred to the question of a more cooperative approach
at the European Union (EU) level or a more autonomous stance This is a remarkable fact
considering the ideological cleavages in Polish politics One of the main reasons for this
re-latively stable consensus has been the steady rise of the oil price2 and the aggressive
comeback of Russia as a great power since the year 2000
The years 2005 and 2006 constituted a major turning point in Polish energy politics for
three reasons First, the Russian-Ukrainian gas crisis revealed that Russia is ready to exploit
its position as the main gas supplier for members of the Commonwealth of Independent States
(CIS) as well as Central and Eastern Europe (CEE)3 with the goal of achieving political
advantages Although similar crises had occurred in CIS countries before, this time the
poli-tical motivation in the context of the Orange Revolution was obvious Second, the crisis
con-curred with the accession to power of PiS in late 2005, which was willing to politicize the
issue of energy dependency Reactions of the new government included the decision to
construct a Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) terminal4 and the demand for a solidary energy
policy at EU level labelled “Energy NATO.”5 Third, in summer 2005, West European and
1 Earlier governments addressed the topic rather broadly The SLD (Sojusz Lewicy Demokratycznej)
government released a corresponding document in January 2005 Ministerstwo Gospodarki i Pracy
(2005): Polityka energetyczna Polski do 2025 roku Warsaw
2 The price for one barrel of Brent crude oil increased from 10 US $ in December 1998 to 144 US $ in July
2008
3 By CEE, I will refer to former socialist countries in Europe (except the GDR), which are not members or
associates of CIS: Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary,
Kosovo, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, and Slovenia
4 Kubiak, Krzysztof (2010): Polska wobec importu skroplonego gazu ziemnego Szanse – zagrożenia –
wyzwania In: Mickiewicz, Piotr; Sokołowska, Patrycja (eds.): Bezpieczeństwo energetyczne Europy
środkowej Toruń, p 204
5 Lang, Kai-Olaf (2006): Mit Sicherheit Polens Energiepolitik zwischen europäischer Solidarität und
Trang 21Russian gas companies agreed to construct the Nord Stream pipeline in order to establish a
direct link between the Russian supplier and consumers in Western Europe From a Polish
point of view, this was unacceptable because Poland and other countries of the region would
lose their importance as transit countries The West European-Russian agreement spurred
fears that CEE countries could be left alone vis-à-vis Russia, since their status as transit
countries was a decisive trump in order to counterweigh energy dependencies Warnings of
a new “gas curtain” were issued referring to the potential of Nord Stream to divide old and
new EU member countries.6 The medial climax was a statement by Radosław Sikorski, then
Polish defense minister, who compared the German-Russian cooperation concerning the
Nord Stream pipeline with the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact preceding the Second World War.7
This sequence of events reoccurred in a similar pattern several years later, this time under
the leadership of PO Once again, yet another Russian-Ukrainian gas crisis was the trigger
After the disruption of gas supplies seriously affecting CEE countries, a heated debate
con-cerning the Polish energy security took place in the Sejm in January 2009 Member of
Parliament Paweł Kowal found the clearest words:8
“For years, they have been saying that Russia could cut off gas [deliveries], but in
reality would never do it Now it did They tried to convince us that it is enough to
have good relations to Gazprom […], not to meddle in disputes with Russia, but to sit
quietly and feel safe No matter what to think about this approach, today we already
know that this is not relevant any more Last week’s incidents hit the quiet CEE
count-ries the hardest.”
Several months later, the Polish government published a strategy paper on energy policy
Next to energy efficiency, supply security and diversification of energy supplies ranked
highest.9 Furthermore, the construction of a nuclear power plant (NPP) figured prominently
in the document, although the idea had already been proposed several years earlier Further
hopes were set on shale gas deposits in northern and eastern Poland The National Geological
Institute proclaimed that shale gas would be able to ensure energy security for several
decades.10 The Energy Union proposed by Donald Tusk in 2014 in parts resembled the
Energy NATO, which had been discussed in 2006 Once again, solidarity and a common
bargaining position towards major energy suppliers were at the heart of the proposal.11
Beyond that, another pipeline project circumventing CEE countries again caused widespread
political turmoil The extension of the Nord Stream pipeline poses the same threats as its
russischer Abhängigkeit In: Polen-Analysen 2, pp 5-6
6 Młynarski, Tomasz (2011): Bezpieczeństwo energetyczne w pierwszej dekadzie XXI wieku Mozaika
interesów i geostrategii Cracow, p 139
7 Kloth, Hans Michael (01.05.2006): Indirect Hitler comparison Polish minister attacks Schröder and
Merkel In: Spiegel Online
(http://www.spiegel.de/international/indirect-hitler-comparison-polish-minister-attacks-schroeder-and-merkel-a-413969 html, accessed October 28, 2016)
8 Sprawozdanie stenograficzne z 33 posiedzenia Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Informacja Prezesa
Rady Ministrów na temat bezpieczeństwa energetycznego Polski w związku z przerwaniem dostarczania
gazu ziemnego z Rosji przez terytorium Ukrainy, 09.01.2009, p 305
9 Ministerstwo Gospodarki (2009): Polityka energetyczna Polski do 2030 roku Warsaw, pp 4-5
10 Państwowy Instytut Geologiczny (2012): Ocena zasobów wydobywalnych gazu ziemnego i ropy naftowej
w formacjach łupkowych dolnego paleozoiku w Polsce Raport Pierwszy Warsaw, p 5
11 Wenerski, Łukasz (2015): Die Energieunion aus polnischer Perspektive Polen-Analysen 167, p 2
© 2017, Otto Harrassowitz GmbH & Co KG, Wiesbaden ISBN Print: 978-3-447-10904-8 - ISBN E-Book: 978-3-447-19676-5
Trang 22Prolog 17
predecessor ten years ago Therefore, it is not surprising that the Polish government returned
to proposals, which had already been discussed a decade earlier.12
Figure 1.1: Polish import dependency on oil and gas (1990–2018)
How intense is the Polish energy dependency? According to the International Energy Agency
(IEA), it is no exaggeration to call Poland import-dependent, especially regarding oil and gas
supplies As Figure 1.1 shows, almost 100 percent of oil was imported in the last two decades
Domestic oil production is very small, covering only a few percent of the country’s overall
demand Concerning the demand for natural gas, around one third is produced domestically
Additionally, natural gas imports have increased in the past decade, reaching a level
compa-rable to that in the year 1990 However, it is important to keep in mind that Poland still
heavily relies on domestic coal In 2012, 56 percent of the primary energy demand and 90
percent of electricity production were covered by brown and hard coal.13 Oil and gas are
important raw materials for the chemical industry and of fundamental importance for the
transport sector Therefore, substitution is possible only to a certain degree In general, the
Polish energy mix strongly resembles that of other CEE countries like Bulgaria, the Czech
Republic, or Estonia, with a high share of coal or peat and a significant import dependency
regarding oil and gas Other CEE countries additionally use further energy sources like
nuclear energy (e.g Slovakia, Hungary) or hydropower (e.g Latvia) Nonetheless, a high
12 After parliamentary elections in October 2015, when PiS won a majority of seats, different stakeholders
relaunched proposals on the construction of a gas pipeline from Norway to Poland
(http://www.cire.pl/item,124474,13,1,2,0,282827,0,poprawa-plusy-i-minusy-gazociagu-norweskiego html#, accessed October 28, 2016) as well as an oil pipeline from Ukrainian Brody and
Polish Płock
(http://www.cire.pl/item,124619,1,1,2,0,283018,0,polska-moze-zreanimowac-projekt-odessa-brody-gdansk html#, accessed October 28, 2016)
13 Grzeszak, Adam (2012): Energie – Herausforderung für Polen Polen-Analysen 109, p 5
Source: author’s illustration, based on numbers in IEA (2014): Energy supply security
Emergency response of IEA countries Paris, p 359
Trang 23import dependency regarding oil and gas is a common feature of most of the CEE countries
due to small domestic deposits
It is the single-source dependency which makes these high levels of oil and gas imports
problematic In the Polish case, this is true for both oil and gas However, due to a different
functioning of the oil and gas markets, the debate on energy dependency focuses on natural
gas Gas is mainly traded on the basis of long-term agreements and tied to a pipeline
infra-structure.14 Although diversification has been a primary energy policy goal for years, high
investment costs and long investment periods complicate reorientation This explains why
the Russian share of Polish gas imports is still high As Table 1.2 reveals, the Russian share
still accounted for 75.7 percent in 2014, although it has been constantly decreasing since
1990 The lower level of imports from Russia in the mid-2000s was related to a higher share
of central Asian countries like Uzbekistan or Turkmenistan However, even in this case,
Poland was still dependent on Russia, because central Asian gas reaches Poland via the
Russian pipeline network
Table 1.2: Polish gas imports from Russia (1990–2014)
1.2 Object of study
The main object of this study are transnational energy infrastructures in the Eastern Bloc as
well as their implications for Poland in the short and long run The first installment of a
cross-border pipeline network connecting production regions in Russia and central Asia with CIS
and CEE countries as well as Western Europe was established in the late 1950s Especially
in this early stage of transnational cooperation, planned economies were lacking the tools as
well as the experience of how to organize this cooperation and to establish prices for
cross-border energy deliveries These problems were first and foremost related to the restricted
foreign trade possibilities of planned economies Nevertheless, energy transport
infrastruc-14 However, the increasing share of LNG traded on spot markets and shipped with tankers has the potential
to fundamentally change market conditions in the long run
Trang 24Object of study 19
tures were considerably extended in the following decades in order to supply European
count-ries with Soviet oil and gas Compared with Czechoslovakia or the GDR, which were more
industrialized and, therefore, in need of energy imports, Poland was not a forerunner
regar-ding the construction of cross-border energy networks in the 1950s and 1960s Only in the
1970s the country increasingly participated in such endeavors The emerging energy
trans-port infrastructure also included oil and gas pipelines as well as electricity transmission lines
In contrast to West European countries, however, storage capacities as well as diversified
import infrastructures were regarded as unnecessary in Eastern Europe The infrastructural
heritage, consisting of pipelines, compressor stations, and other technical components
deter-mines the high Polish oil and gas import dependencies until today Due to long investment
periods in the energy sector as well as considerable investment costs, this situation is
changing slowly Therefore, it is necessary to take a closer look at the history of transnational
energy infrastructures to better understand the existing situation in the Polish energy sector
The term Eastern Bloc denotes the time and space of my research The Eastern Bloc
enve-loped countries in Eastern Europe where socialist or communist parties were in power
between the later 1940s and 1989/1991 Since long-term developments are in the focus of
this work, the time frame will be extended to the periods before and after the socialist time
with special regard to the Polish case The study follows a historical periodization and takes
into account those neighboring socialist countries, with which Poland cooperated the most,
i.e the Soviet Union, the GDR, and Czechoslovakia
The subject can be further tightened down to transnational energy infrastructures,
consti-tuting a central part of the Eastern European energy sector According to the historians Erik
van der Vleuten and Arne Kaijser, transnational energy infrastructures are still an
underde-veloped field of research, although historians widely acknowledge the fundamental role of
transnational networks The decisive influence of infrastructures is assumed but still not
analyzed.15 Applying this topic to the time and space described above, the research gap
becomes even more obvious The historian Vincent Lagendijk points to the fact that the
majority of research on energy infrastructures is conducted from a national perspective and
usually pays attention to the United States (US) and Western Europe.16 The historians Klaus
Gestwa and Stefan Rohdewald shared this opinion and explicitly mentioned energy
infra-structures in the Eastern Bloc as desiderata.17
A proper way to approach this research gap is to focus on the institutions responsible for
planning, constructing, and operating cross-border energy networks Contemporary studies
point to the Council of Mutual Economic Aid18 (CMEA) as a decisive decision-making body
15 Van der Vleuten, Erik; Kaijser, Arne (2006): Prologue and introduction: transnational networks and the
shaping of contemporary Europe In: Van der Vleuten, Erik; Kaijser, Arne (eds.): Networking Europe
Transnational infrastructures and the shaping of Europe 1850–2000 Sagamore Beach, p 7
16 Lagendijk, Vincent (2008): Electrifying Europe The power of Europe in the construction of electricity
networks Amsterdam, p 22 Examples are: Nye, David (1990): Electrifying America: social meanings
of a new technology 1880-1940 Cambridge Kaijser, Arne; Hedin, Marika (1995): Nordic energy
systems Historical perspectives and current issues Canton Shamir, Ronen (2013): Current flow The
electrification of Palestine Stanford
17 Gestwa, Klaus; Rohdewald, Stefan (2009): Verflechtungsstudien Naturwissenschaft und Technik im
Kalten Krieg In: Osteuropa 59/10, p 14
18 Sometimes Council of Mutual Economic Assistance Especially in Western literature also Comecon
Trang 25with regard to oil and gas pipelines or electricity transmission lines.19 The CMEA existed for
more than 40 years and was deeply involved in the energy sector in general as well as
trans-national energy infrastructures in particular By focusing on the CMEA, I can avoid some of
the pitfalls of exclusive micro- or macro-approaches concentrating on case studies or the
national level Especially in the case of transnational infrastructures, this seems to be a
reasonable approach.20
1.3 Literature overview
Next to the Warsaw Pact, the CMEA was the most important international organization of
Eastern Bloc countries and an important planning body in the energy sector.21 Founded in
1949 and dissolved in 1991, the CMEA reflected the political and economic ups and downs
in the Eastern Bloc The administrative structure included the Executive Committee, the
Secretariat, Standing Commissions as well as CMEA sessions regularly held in East
European capitals Additionally, meetings of first secretaries or heads of government of
CMEA member countries taking place immediately before CMEA sessions had a decisive
influence on decision-making
Due to the CMEA’s long existence, considerable size, and significant impact, the
corres-ponding literature is immense Plans by Nikita Khrushchëv, First Secretary of the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), to transform the CMEA into a supranational planning
authority, significantly piqued the interest of Western researchers Especially the Sino-Soviet
split and the successful Romanian blockade of Khrushchëv‘s plans attracted closer
attention.22 Valuable monographies written by East European authors appeared with regard
to the 25th anniversary of the CMEA in 1974 Moreover, the CMEA Bulletin had been
published by the CMEA secretariat since 1975 Although these works are politically biased
and often mask decisive debates, they provide a detailed overview.23 Intensified integration
efforts of CMEA countries and the rapprochement between East and West invited further
19 Ruban, Rostyslav (2013): The European natural gas supply, under particular consideration of gas transit
Dissertation Berlin, pp 119-120 Newnham, Randall (2011): Oil, carrots, and sticks: Russia’s energy
resources as a foreign policy tool In: Journal of Eurasian Studies 2/2, p 135 Balmaceda, Margarita
(2002): EU energy policy and future European energy markets: consequences for the central and east
European states Mannheim, p 4
20 For a detailed elaboration, see the methods section
21 Full members included Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, Romania, the Soviet Union, Albania
(active participation until 1961), the GDR (since 1950), Mongolia (since 1962), Cuba (since 1972), and
Vietnam (since 1978)
22 Hoffmann, Emil (1961): COMECON Der gemeinsame Markt in Osteuropa Opladen Uschakow,
Alexander (1962): Der Rat für gegenseitige Wirtschaftshilfe (Comecon) Cologne Kaser, Michael
(1967): Comecon Integration problems of the planned economies Oxford
23 Boroch, N et al (1975): RGW Bilanz u Perspektiven Berlin Faddejew, N (1975): Der Rat für
Gegenseitige Wirtschaftshilfe Berlin Hegemann, Margot (1980): Kurze Geschichte des RGW Berlin
Ėkonomicheskoe Sotrudnichestvo Stran-Chlenov SĖV Informat͡sionnyĭ Bi͡ulleten’ (1975-1991)
Moscow
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Trang 26Literature overview 21
interest New cooperation mechanisms like the Complex Program, the International
Invest-ment Bank (IIB), or International Economic Organizations came into focus.24 In order to
assess the intensified cooperation, an exact knowledge of legal frameworks and regulations
was needed Lawyers in East and West published collections of basic CMEA documents and
other international economic institutions.25 Interaction and mutual influences between the
CMEA and individual member countries were of scientific importance, too Poland26 as the
second largest member country with considerable political weight drew researchers’
particu-lar interest Aside from politics, economic aspects such as the impact of the country’s debt
crisis as well as the Polish coal sector on intrabloc trade were discussed.27 In the last years of
the CMEA’s existence, several East European scientists and economists, who often dealt
throughout their entire working life with the CMEA, published their experiences and insider
knowledge, providing helpful insights.28 Another relevant source of information are
biblio-graphies, stemming from the 1990s.29 The mentioned literature provides a general idea of the
overall history of the CMEA, which is necessary for a detailed work on the energy sector in
CMEA countries
Although Western scholars had occasionally discussed questions related to the Eastern
European energy sector,30 the issue gained center stage in the course of the oil crises In
24 Ribi, Rolf (1970): Das Comecon Eine Untersuchung über die Problematik der wirtschaftlichen
Integration sozialistischer Länder Zurich Bröll, Werner (1975): Comecon (Rat für gegenseitige
Wirtschaftshilfe) Der Integrationsversuch sozialistischer Planwirtschaften Munich Bethkenhagen,
Jochen; Machowski, Heinrich (1976): Integration im Rat für gegenseitige Wirtschaftshilfe Entwicklung,
Organisation, Erfolge u Grenzen Berlin Damus, Renate (1979): RGW, wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit
in Osteuropa Opladen Brabant, Jozef van (1980): Socialist economic integration Aspects of
contemporary economic problems in Eastern Europe Cambridge
25 Rüster, Lothar (1978): Grunddokumente des RGW Berlin Mentz, Dieter; Pfeffer, Joachim (1982): Die
rechtliche Regelung der internationalen Energiebeziehungen der RGW-Länder Munich Uschakow,
Alexander (1984): Internationale Rohstoffabkommen im RGW In: Gutmann, Gernot; Thalheim, Karl;
Wöhlke, Wilhelm (eds.): Das Energieproblem in Ostmitteleuropa II: Energiepolitik und Energieverbund
in den mitteleuropäischen RGW-Staaten Marburg, pp 93–113
26 Although the historically correct term is “Polish People’s Republic,” I will use the term “Poland” to refer
to the Second Polish Republic, the Polish People’s Republic as well as contemporary Poland for brevity’s
sake
27 Uschakow, Alexander (1982): Die Stellung Polens im Rat für Gegenseitige Wirtschaftshilfe In:
Gutmann, Gernot; Thalheim, Karl; Wöhlke, Wilhelm (eds.): Integration im Rat für Gegenseitige
Wirtschaftshilfe (RGW) Das Beispiel Polens und der ČSSR Marburg, pp 51–62 Gabrisch, Hubert
(1984): Das polnische Interesse am RGW In: Schönfeld, Roland; Altmann, Franz-Lothar (eds.):
RGW-Integration und Südosteuropa Munich, pp 189–198 Trzeciakowski, Witold (1986): Polska w RWPG
Wrocław Ptaszek, Jan (1987): Współpraca PRL z krajami RWPG w sferze produkcji materialnej
Warsaw
28 Zwass, Adam (1988): Der Rat für gegenseitige Wirtschaftshilfe 1949 bis 1987 Der dornige Weg von
einer politischen zu einer wirtschaftlichen Integration Vienna Różański, Henryk (1990): Spojrzenie na
RWPG Wspomnienia, dokumenty, refleksje 1949-1988 Warsaw Korbonski, Andrzej (1990): CMEA,
economic integration, and perestroika, 1949-1989 In: Studies in Comparative Communism 23/1, pp 47–
72
29 E.g Brine, Jenny (1992): Comecon The rise and fall of an international socialist organization Oxford
30 Wessely, Kurt (1962): Tendenzen in der Energiewirtschaft des Ostblocks I: Sowjetunion In: Osteuropa
8-9, pp 578–584 Idem: II: Das Verhältnis der Ostblockstaaten untereinander In: Osteuropa 11-12, pp
813–818 Bröll, Werner (1968): Die energetische Integration des RGW-Raumes In: Osteuropa Wirtschaft
1, pp 26–49
Trang 27general, scholars were interested in the energy sectors of individual socialist countries, the
functioning of intrabloc energy trade, and the pricing mechanism.31 In particular, the impacts
of the oil crises in East and West were assessed Whereas the West had managed to restrict
energy demand, the energy intensity of East European economies further increased, because
austerity measures yielded only limited results.32 Of course, East European scholars observed
the considerable impacts of the oil crises, too However, this question had been perceived as
only one aspect of a much broader “energy and fuel problem,” under discussion since the
1960s This problem was unleashed by the socialist industrialization with its focus on
energy-intense industry sectors, leading to a significant growth of energy demand Already since the
1960s, the Soviet Union had pointed to increasing production costs and proposed new forms
of cooperation.33 One form were joint investments in the Soviet fuel and raw materials sector
Such endeavors were of particular interest for researchers Due to the uneven distribution of
oil, gas, iron ore, or asbestos deposits, which were located mainly in the Soviet Union, East
European planners faced considerable theoretical and practical problems of socialist foreign
investment.34
Western scholars started observing the problems of the Eastern Bloc’s energy sector after
the oil crises In the 1980s, a considerable amount of research works was published
Especi-ally the Soviet Union’s role as the main energy supplier for East European as well as West
European countries was discussed Of special interest was the Soviet reaction to rocketing
global energy prices, significantly raising the opportunity costs of energy supplies to Eastern
Bloc countries Growing Soviet hard currency needs to buy grain and technology on global
31 Bethkenhagen, Jochen (1977): Die Zusammenarbeit der RGW-Länder auf dem Energiesektor In:
Osteuropa Wirtschaft 22/2, pp 63–80 Park, Daniel (1979): Oil & gas in Comecon countries New York
Dietz, Raimund (1984): Die Energiewirtschaft in Osteuropa und der UdSSR Vienna Kaser, Michael
(1985): Energy trade within Comecon In: Fink, Gerhard (ed.): Socialist economy and economic policy
Vienna, pp 215–230 Reisinger, William (1992): Energy and the Soviet Bloc Alliance politics after
Stalin Ithaca
32 Dobozi, István (1981): Policy responses to the energy crisis East and West In: ACES Bulletin 23/1, pp
25–66 Saunders, Christopher (ed.) (1980): East and West in the energy squeeze Prospects for
cooperation London Jansen, Paul (1984): Energiepolitik unter dem Eindruck der beiden Ölpreiskrisen
Die Beispiele der ČSSR, DDR, Polens und Ungarns In: Gutmann, Gernot; Thalheim, Karl; Wöhlke,
Wilhelm (eds.): Das Energieproblem in Ostmitteleuropa II: Energiepolitik und Energieverbund in den
mitteleuropäischen RGW-Staaten Marburg
33 Jakuschin, A (1971): Zusammenarbeit der RGW-Länder zur Lösung des Brennstoffproblems In:
Aussenhandel 1, pp 5–8 Dembowski, Jacek (1974): Problemy surowcowe we współpracy krajów
RWPG In: Gospodarka Planowa 1, pp 21–25 Gorywoda, Manfred (1978): Współpraca krajów RWPG
w gospodarowaniu surowcami Warsaw Kozlov, Igor’ (1980): Ėnergeticheskoe khozi͡aĭstvo stran SĖV:
problemy i perspektivy sotrudnichestva Moscow Gwiazda, Adam (1981): Energetyczna współzależność
krajów RWPG In: Handel Zagraniczny 26/5, pp 25–30 Sydow, P et al (1981): Wirtschaftliches
Wachstum europäischer RGW-Länder Ziele – Bedingungen – Aufgaben Berlin, Chapter 4
34 Wyczański, Paweł (1977): Systemy wspólnego finansowania inwestycji krajów RWPG Warsaw
Hannigan, John; McMillan, Carl (1981): Joint investment in resource development Sectoral approaches
to socialist integration In: East European economic assessment II: regional assessments Washington
D.C., pp 259–295 Żukrowska, Katarzyna (1981): Wspólne inwestycje krajów RWPG, ich efektywność
i znaczenia dla społeczno-gospodarczego rozwoju tych krajów Warsaw Schönfeld, Roland (1984):
Gemeinsame Investitionen im RGW und die Beteiligung der südosteuropäischen Mitgliedsländer In:
Schönfeld, Roland; Altmann, Franz-Lothar (eds.): RGW-Integration und Südosteuropa Munich, pp 101–
126
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markets made oil and gas exports to Western Europe more attractive, although a large-scale
redirection of energy supplies away from socialist partners was not feasible, either.35 Beyond
that, Western researchers noticed the paradox of growing energy shortages in the Soviet
Union itself Reform attempts under General Secretaries Leonid Brezhnev and Mikhail
Gorbachëv had not succeed to uncouple energy demand from economic growth, and the
energy-rich country was experiencing a lack of energy Scholars speculated about the Soviet
Union transforming from a major energy supplier into an energy importer as well as the
implications of this development for the West.36
Another relevant branch of literature referred to the political dimension of the energy
crisis in the Eastern Bloc Western researchers discussed the Soviet Union’s implicit
subsi-dies to its socialist allies in the form of lower energy prices.37 The Soviet Union’s outstanding
role as energy supplier seemed to be an appropriate policy tool to keep the smaller Bloc
countries in line According to the economists Michael Marrese and Jan Vanous, the largest
subsidies in the form of low energy prices went to loyal countries like Czechoslovakia and
the German Democratic Republic (GDR), whereas Poland and especially Romania received
the least favorable conditions in the 1960s and 1970s Another important factor was that
energy supplies were usually paid with goods like machines and technical equipment, which
were not competitive on global markets However, later research qualified these findings and
pointed to the decisive influence of the CMEA pricing mechanism in intrabloc trade.38 By
including the 1980s in the evaluation period, the implicit subsidies almost disappeared Due
to the delayed adaptation of intrabloc prices to world market prices, oil-importing CMEA
countries had to pay for Soviet oil even more than the world market price since the
mid-1980s The discussion was related to the general question of the Soviet Union’s role as a
hegemonic power From the very beginning of its existence, the CMEA had been interpreted
35 Böhm, Edward (1980): Die Rolle der Sowjetunion in der Brennstoffwirtschaft des RGW Hamburg
Russell, Jeremy (1981): Energy in the Soviet Union: Problems for Comecon? In: The World Economy
4/2-3, pp 291–314 Bethkenhagen, Jochen (1983): Die Auswirkungen der Ölpreissenkungen auf die
UdSSR und die übrigen RGW-Länder Cologne Hardt, John (1984): Soviet energy policy in Eastern
Europe In: Terry, Sarah (ed.): Soviet policy in Eastern Europe New Haven, pp 189–220 Hewett,
Edward (1984): Energy, economics, and foreign policy in the Soviet Union Washington D.C Brezinski,
Horst (1984): Wirtschaftliche Fragen des Energieverbundes im Ostblock In: Gutmann, Gernot; Thalheim,
Karl; Wöhlke, Wilhelm (eds.): Das Energieproblem in Ostmitteleuropa II: Energiepolitik und
Energieverbund in den mitteleuropäischen RGW-Staaten Marburg, pp 61–91 Czakainski, Martin
(1984): Die Energieversorgung im RGW Stand, Probleme, Perspektiven In: Osteuropa 34/6, pp 440–
453
36 Johns, Lionel; Sharfman, Peter; Goldberg, Ronnie (1981): Technology and Soviet energy availability
Washington D.C Stern, Jonathan (1983): East European energy and East-West trade in energy In:
Belgrave, Robert (ed.): Energy – two decades of crisis Aldershot, pp 1–90 Jentleson, Bruce (1986):
Pipeline politics The complex political economy of East-West energy trade Ithaca Gustafson, Thane
(1989): Crisis amid plenty The politics of Soviet energy under Brezhnev and Gorbachev Princeton
37 Marrese, Michael; Vanous, Jan (1983): Soviet subsidization of trade with Eastern Europe A Soviet
perspective Berkeley Lavigne, Marie (1983): The Soviet Union inside Comecon In: Soviet Studies 35/2,
pp 135–153 Marer, Paul (1984): The political economy of Soviet relations with Eastern Europe In:
Terry, Sarah (ed.): Soviet policy in Eastern Europe New Haven, pp 155–188 Brada, Josef (1985): Soviet
subsidization of Eastern Europe: The primacy of economics over politics? In: Journal of Comparative
Economics 9/1, pp 80–92
38 Kramer, John (1990): The energy gap in Eastern Europe Lexington, pp 29-30
Trang 29by some scholars as a Soviet instrument to tie together and steer the smaller socialist countries
in Eastern Europe The CMEA’s establishment as a response to the Marshall Plan seemed to
support this interpretation This assessment was discussed throughout the Eastern Bloc’s
entire existence.39 Due to direct access to the archives and involved decision-makers, this
point of view was qualified in the 1990s The Soviet Union’s increasing inability to impose
its policies as well as the soft bargaining power of smaller CMEA countries was brought into
focus.40 In the 2000s, the discussion concerning Soviet hegemonic power in relation to energy
deliveries again intensified and was applied to the Russian energy policy as well This was
directly related to Russia’s repeated misuse of energy supplies as a political pressure
instrument.41 One of the main aims of this policy is to stabilize the Russian influence in CIS
countries, colloquially labeled in Russian politics as “near abroad.” The notion of special
relations to neighboring countries like Belarus, Ukraine, or Kazakhstan and to a lesser degree
to CEE is based on the close cultural and political ties between these countries However, the
asymmetric division of political and economic power for at least the last three centuries has
decisively shaped this relationship.42
1.4 Research questions and theses
The general idea of this work is to examine the establishment of transnational energy
infra-structures in the Eastern Bloc and their implications for Poland In particular, I will focus on
three question blocks Whereas the first block refers to the organizational and economic
dimensions, the second block concentrates on the power structures behind the examined
projects The third block relates to the impacts on Poland as well as the country’s role in these
endeavors
(1) How did participating countries cooperate in planning, constructing, and operating
transnational energy infrastructures? Which actors were involved and who was the driving
force? Which role did Poland play in these endeavors? Which problems did occur during
planning, construction, and operation? How did CMEA countries finance the projects? How
did modes of cooperation develop and change over time?
39 Gumpel, Werner (1976): Der Rat für Gegenseitige Wirtschaftshilfe als Instrument sowjetischer
Hegemonie In: Osteuropa 11, pp 997–1006 Meier, Christian (1986): Der RGW
Wirtschaftsgemein-schaft oder Instrument sowjetischer Hegemonialpolitik? Cologne
40 Stone, Randall (1996): Satellites and commissars Strategy and conflict in the politics of Soviet-Bloc
trade Princeton Herzog, Gerd (1998): Schwäche als Stärke: Bargaining Power im RGW Berlin Ahrens,
Ralf (2000): Gegenseitige Wirtschaftshilfe? Die DDR im RGW – Strukturen und handelspolitische
Strategien 1963–1976 Cologne
41 Balmaceda, Margarita (2004): Der Weg in die Abhängigkeit Ostmitteleuropa am Energietropf der
UdSSR In: Osteuropa 54/9-10, pp 162–179 Beckmann, Elisabeth; Fidrmuc, Jarko: Oil price shock and
structural changes in CMEA trade Pouring oil on troubled waters? Munich Closson, Stacy (2011): A
comparative analysis on energy subsidies in Soviet and Russian policy In: Communist and
Post-Communist Studies 44/4, pp 343–356
42 An analysis of Russia’s relationship with CIS or CEE countries in the context of postcolonial theory could
be revealing For an introduction see Moore, David (2005): Is the in postcolonial the in
post-Soviet? Toward a global postcolonial critique In: Desai, Gaurav; Nair, Supriya (eds.): Postcolonialisms:
an anthology of cultural theory and criticism New Brunswick, pp 514-538
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Trang 30Research questions and theses 25
(2) Why did cross-border energy infrastructures in the Eastern Bloc come into being? Which interests drove the involved countries, especially Poland and the Soviet Union? How large was the room for maneuvering of the smaller CMEA countries? Which kind of bargai-ning process took place in this asymmetric partnership?
(3) What were the short- and long-term implications for Poland? Did these infrastructures spur Poland’s integration into the Eastern Bloc? Do existing transnational energy infrastruc-tures adversely affect today’s Polish energy security? Was there a continuity of Polish energy policy before, during and after the socialist period?
I propose three theses by referring to the above question blocks Their validity will be verified on the basis of material presented in the following chapters and finally assessed in the conclusion of this work
(1) Modes of cooperation concerning the planning, construction, and operation of national energy infrastructures have changed over the decades They developed in parallel
trans-to the overall evolution of socialist integration efforts Regional forms of cooperation in the
1950s were soon incorporated into the CMEA, leading to a significant expansion of CMEA structures in the 1960s and 1970s Cooperation forms like credit lending or workforce posting developed due to the Soviet Union’s growing reluctance to further scale up oil exports to CMEA countries The establishment of new trade institutions in the 1970s allowed for an enhanced intrabloc burden sharing as well as large-scale imports of Western technology However, the success of the new cooperation forms was limited by obstacles characteristic
of the socialist foreign trade like the dysfunctional pricing mechanism The global oil crises amplified disintegration tendencies Consequently, cooperation fell back to a bilateral level
in the 1980s The dissolution of the Eastern Bloc fundamentally changed the framework for cross-border cooperation regarding oil, gas, and electricity networks
(2) Cross-border energy infrastructures in the Eastern Bloc came into being for economic reasons They served the interests of energy-hungry CMEA countries, which preferred plan- nable and affordable energy imports from the Soviet Union The alternative to buying oil on
the global market was far less attractive to energy-importing CMEA countries due to price increases after the oil crises as well as the impossibility to pay with “soft” goods Taking into account the chronic shortage of convertible currencies, paying with uncompetitive “soft” goods was a decisive advantage for energy-importing CMEA countries The Soviet Union refrained from overly exploiting its advantageous position in the field of energy supplies, although this position strengthened after the oil crises Despite this asymmetric partnership, smaller CMEA countries were able to enforce their interests at least partially and, therefore, limited the Soviet Union’s position of power
(3) In contrast to other CMEA countries, Poland was more reluctant to increase energy imports because of considerable domestic coal deposits Due to its economic advantages and necessities, however, Poland increasingly participated in transnational energy infrastructure projects Consequently, the Polish energy mix slowly changed over the decades and implied
growing import dependencies Only after leaving the Soviet sphere of influence at the ning of the 1990s, existing import dependencies appeared on the political agenda Energy security in connection with transnational energy infrastructures became more pressing after Russia’s exploitation of regional energy dependencies as a policy tool This fact significantly influences today’s Polish energy policy
Trang 31begin-1.5 Methods and sources
In order to address the micro level, I will conduct three case studies This work will describe
and try to assess the economic as well as political impact of the crude oil pipeline Druzhba
(Friendship) constructed from 1959 to 1964, the natural gas pipeline Soi͡uz (Alliance)
constructed from 1975 to 1979 as well as the electricity network Mir (Peace), which was
under construction from 1958 until the late 1980s The inclusion of micro studies is a proper
way to complete the macro perspective of national governments and the meso perspective of
international organizations like the CMEA.43 The mentioned projects suit well as case studies
for two reasons First, each of them was of high economic and political relevance and left
significant traces Second, they cover different time periods, allowing me to track changing
modes of cooperation in order to follow up continuities as well as discontinuities When
comparing oil, gas, and electricity infrastructures, however, it is necessary to keep in mind
the differences between the three energy carriers, although all of them rely on transport
networks.44
Next to the secondary literature, this work is based on diverse sources from archives in
Warsaw, Berlin, and Moscow The archive material originates from Polish, Soviet, and East
German ministries of energy, industry, construction, economy, international trade, or central
planning boards as well as from the CMEA and its branch organizations as well as other
institutions directly related to the construction of transnational energy infrastructures
Although the CMEA material is well accessible, it usually does not openly address
contro-versies In contrast to this, documents generated by government administrations and
desig-nated for internal use occasionally describe problems and disputes Unfortunately, the archive
material regarding the Polish participation in the Soi͡uz pipeline project is incomplete Polish
minutes of proceedings of the corresponding intergovernmental commission terminate at the
end of 1975 for unknown reasons Perhaps this was related to the transformation of the Polish
Ministry of Mining and Energy into the Ministry of Energy and Nuclear Power in March
1976 Consultations with archivists from the Archiwum Akt Nowych (AAN) in Warsaw as
well as smaller archives of corresponding ministries produced no results However, meeting
records of the mentioned intergovernmental commission could be found in Moscow as well
as Berlin Although the genuine Polish standpoint is missing here, that material is used to
bridge the gap in the Polish archival material This fact further adds to the broad, transnational
perspective of this work taking into account all CMEA countries, even though Poland will
43 The idea of the CMEA as a meso-level institution is adopted from Misa, Thomas: Retrieving
sociotechnical change from technological determinism In: Smith, Merritt; Marx, Leo (eds.): Does
technology drive history? The dilemma of technological determinism Cambridge, pp 139-140
44 With regard to transport, oil is the most flexible energy carrier of the three, since it can be shipped by very
different means of transport like horse wagons, trains, tankers, or pipes Gas transport is mainly tied to a
pipeline infrastructure This fact is decisive for the oil and gas market structure Whereas gas markets in
North America, Europe, and East Asia are largely separated, there is a functioning global oil market
However, technical progress regarding LNG makes gas transport increasingly flexible Long distance
electricity transport on the basis of alternating current is viable, too, although electricity transport always
includes power losses With regard to storage, however, electricity is disadvantaged if compared to oil
and gas, since large-scale electricity storage is still not feasible, although pump storage hydropower plants
represent a second-best solution
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Trang 32Theoretical approach 27
be of central importance Nevertheless, country names in the text are listed in an alphabetic
order
Concerning the transliteration of Cyrillic anthroponyms and toponyms, I will apply the
transliteration rules of the American Library Association Following the source material, the
Russian version of toponyms in the Soviet Union is transliterated until the year 1991 I
refrained from transliterating toponyms with a well-established English spelling like
Moscow, Lviv, or Chernobyl
In an attempt to complement the archive material, I conducted two interviews with experts
in the Polish energy sector in 2015 These interviews pay attention to the subject’s historical
as well as contemporary dimension The interviewees were found according to snowball
sampling Since said material is not at the heart of this work, I refrained from dwelling on the
methods of qualitative interviewing Nevertheless, the interviews provide some instructive
historical insides as well as revealing opinions on today’s Polish energy policy The
interviews were conducted in Polish and are in the author´s possession
1.6 Theoretical approach
The first section of the following paragraph will describe the theoretical approach, which
seems to be most suitable for studying transnational energy infrastructures Nevertheless,
some shortcomings and ambiguities have been detected, which are assessed in the second
section The third section will specify the concepts of the research approach applied in this
work
1.6.1 Large Technological Systems
The Large Technological System (LTS) framework constitutes a proper way to approach the
research subject of energy infrastructures scientifically The historian of technology Thomas
Hughes first substantiated this approach in his seminal work “Networks of Power” published
in 1983.45 In the following decades, a growing number of social scientists from different
research fields added theoretical and empirical material The main idea is to study not only a
single artefact, like a pipeline, but the entire technical, economic, political, and cultural
constellation Initially, Hughes focused on electric power systems, since such systems
“embody the physical, intellectual, and symbolic resources of the society that constructs
them.”46 This reveals the broad understanding of LTSs as sociotechnical systems, a term
often used as a synonym for LTSs
In order to describe the complex interrelation between technical core and social context,
Hughes coined the expression “seamless web.”47 This metaphor emphasizes the idea of
inseparable ties between core and context and was meant to protect researchers from
techno-logical determinism, i.e the notion that technical forces exclusively determine social and
cultural changes For Hughes, the best way to approach an LTS was to focus on so-called
45 Hughes, Thomas (1983): Networks of power Electrification in Western society; 1880–1930 Baltimore
46 Ibid., p 2
47 Hughes, Thomas (1986): The seamless web: technology, science, etcetera, etcetera In: Social Studies of
Science 16/2, p 285
Trang 33system builders, who solved crucial technical as well as non-technical problems in order to
develop the system within an existing institutional framework Famous examples are
indivi-duals like Thomas Edison, Samuel Insull, or Henry Ford, usually inventors, engineers,
managers, and entrepreneurs in one person
Besides the basic idea of LTSs as sociotechnical systems, Hughes and others proposed
further definitions, periodizations, and extensions of the concept According to him, a system
“is constituted of related parts or components These components are connected by a network,
or structure, […] The interconnected components of technical systems are often centrally
controlled, and usually the limits of the system are established by the extent of this control.”48
Therefore, such components can be physical artefacts like turbogenerators, transformers, and
transmission lines but also such diverse structures as mines, nuclear power plants,
manufac-turing firms, utility companies, laboratories or investment banks In later works, Hughes also
focused on non-physical artifacts like research programs and regulatory laws.49
These diverse components are part of one system, because they are controlled by or at
least interact with the technical core to fulfill a common goal A horizontally arranged system
includes components of the same function such as several power plants, whereas a vertically
arranged system is based on components of a functional chain like a coal mine and a power
plant Components are connected by in- and outputs and are often organized in smaller
subsystems Hughes also made a distinction between the words “technical” and
“technologi-cal.” The term “technical” is applied to physical artifacts, whereas “technological” is the
contact zone between the technical and social world formed by institutions, values, interest
groups, social classes, and political or economic forces.50 Consequently, in this work, I will
apply the term “Large Technological System,” because it includes both technical and social
aspects, although other researchers often use “Large Technical System.”
Further definitional ambiguities are related to the L in LTS Hughes did not try to define
this aspect, leaving it to the intuition of individual researchers Other scientists searched for
a clear definition but hardly succeeded.51 The advantage of this ambiguity is that the LTS
approach can be applied to such diverse objects as railroads, telegraph and telephone, the
videotext, national air control, and even the European organ transplant system In order to
structure this diversity, Bernward Joerges suggested distinguishing between “large technical
networks” and “large technical programs” like the Manhattan Project, the Aswan dam, or the
fusion reactor.52 However, the focus remained on energy and especially electricity systems
48 Hughes: Networks of power, p 5
49 Hughes, Thomas (1993): The evolution of Large Technical Systems In: Bijker, Wiebe; Hughes, Thomas;
Pinch, Trevor (eds.): The social construction of technological systems New directions in the sociology
and history of technology Cambridge, p 51
50 Hughes, Thomas (1994): Technological momentum In: Smith, Merritt Roe; Marx, Leo (eds.): Does
technology drive history? The dilemma of technological determinism Cambridge, p 103
51 Bernward Joerges proposed the following definition: “complex and heterogenous systems of physical
structures and complex machineries which (1) are materially integrated, or ‘coupled’ over large spans of
space and time quite irrespective of their particular cultural, political, economic and corporate make-up,
and (2) support or sustain the functioning of very large numbers of other technical systems, whose
organizations they thereby link.” Joerges, Bernward (1988): Large technical systems Concepts and
issues In: Hughes, Thomas; Mayntz, Renate (eds.): The development of Large Technical Systems
Frankfurt/Main, p 24
52 Joerges: Concepts and issues, p 27
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Trang 34Theoretical approach 29
Another relevant aspect of the LTS approach is a periodization of the growth of
socio-technical systems After comparing the development of the Berlin, Chicago, and London
electricity systems, Hughes distinguished some prevalent characteristics and proposed the
following development stages of LTSs:53
Invention and development: inventor-entrepreneurs play a dominant role and provide the
germinal LTS with economic and political conditions, enabling further growth in a given
sociotechnical environment Inventor-entrepreneurs promote the relatively simple invention
in order to create a system that is able to function in a complex reality
Technological transfer: the system is adapted to different local, regional, or national
environments and assumes widely varying styles under different geographical, political,
legal, and historical conditions Agents of change are inventors, entrepreneurs, organizers of
enterprises and financiers
System growth: critical problems have to be solved in order to compete with alternative
systems Dominant system goals are rationalization, efficiency and capital intensification
Momentum: the system has stabilized and consists of a growing number of physical
arti-facts in which considerable capital has been invested Professionals additionally strengthen
the system with their specialized skills Companies, government agencies, and education
institutions shape and are shaped by the technical core of the system
Due to the inclusion of earlier development stages, the momentum phase is of particular
interest and strongly resembles the idea of historical path dependencies.54 Therefore,
momentum is also the most debated stage and will be of significance for this work, too A
closer look can be helpful to better understand the concept In accordance with classical
mechanics, momentum depends on the mass and velocity of an object and stays constant if
not influenced from outside This causality is called the law of conservation of momentum
Regarding the LTS approach, this means that the size and endurance of a system largely
determine its stability Stability can finally result in lock-in, where it is hard to change the
fundamental direction or modes of operation of the system In such a case, the self-sustaining
momentum can only be changed by shocks from within or outside According to Hughes, the
advantage of the concept is the fact that it avoids technological determinism as well as social
construction, since neither do technical forces determine social and cultural changes nor do
social forces determine technical changes.55 Rather, social developments shape and are
shaped by technology This is what Hughes calls technological momentum
53 Hughes: Networks of power, pp 14-17
54 When using the term “historical path dependency,” I refrain from referring to the path dependency theory
itself A conscientious application of this theory would require concentrating on key concepts like
bifurcation points, positive feedbacks, or lock-in, which is not possible in this work Nevertheless, there
are some revealing intersections between the LTS approach and the path dependency theory For the
application of the path dependency theory in the field of LTSs, see for example Ambrosius, Gerold;
Franke, Christian (2015): Pfadabhängigkeiten internationaler Infrastrukturnetze In: Jahrbuch für
Wirtschaftsgeschichte 56/1, pp 291-312 Cowan, Robin (1990): Nuclear power reactors A study of
technological lock-in In: Journal of Economic History 50/3, pp 541-567 Unruh, Gregory (2000):
Understanding carbon lock-in In: Energy Policy 28, pp 817-830 Raven, Rob; Van der Vleuten, Erik
(2006): Lock-in and change Distributed generation in Denmark in a long-term perspective In: Energy
Policy 34, pp 3739-3748
55 Hughes: Technological momentum, p 102
Trang 35Hughes stressed that the suggested development pattern is not simply sequential or linear
but can overlap or turn back Furthermore, this periodization referred to the specific case
study of local electricity networks in Berlin, Chicago, and London In order to generalize
development patterns, LTS scholars proposed three general questions to be answered.56 Do
different technical systems develop along the same sequence of phases? How does the
nati-onal context regarding economic, legal, or political aspects influence the development of a
given type of technical system? To what extent is it possible to construct a comprehensive
model of system development, covering different technologies as well as different national
contexts?
As a growing number of researchers gathered diversified empirical material,
periodiza-tions became more detailed However, the initial development pattern proposed by Hughes
was not fundamentally changed An invention phase was still at the beginning of the
develo-pment This initial stage is marked by radical or conservative inventions, which inaugurate
completely new systems or improve existing ones Empirical evidence suggests that
stakeholders of an existing system usually support conservative inventions, since radical
inventions do not contribute to the growth of the system already in place.57 In the
development phase, the new system is adapted to the economic, political, and social
surroundings In this phase, so-called reverse salients have to be overcome Reverse salients
are technical or organizational anomalies, which arise during an uneven evolution of system
components Because all components in a system are functionally related, changes in one or
more components cause overall imbalances due to a suboptimal interaction System builders
identify and try to solve the underlying critical problems, which makes reverse salients an
important factor for system stagnation as well as system growth.58 The subsequent innovation
phase adds further components, enabling the system to compete with alternative systems In
the final consolidation phase, the system has acquired momentum and is less dependent on
its environment.59
As new technologies related to digitization or renewable energy sources have gained in
importance since the late 1980s, challenging the momentum of well-established LTSs, the
scientific discussion has increasingly tended to include a phase of recession or depression
into the periodization of LTSs Consequently, there emerged a debate concerning the question
whether or not growth is an inherent characteristic of LTSs Thomas Hughes suggested that
technological systems over time increasingly manage to incorporate their environment in
order to eliminate sources of uncertainty.60 The concepts of load factor and economic mix
56 Hughes, Thomas; Mayntz, Renate (1988): Foreword In: Hughes, Thomas; Mayntz, Renate (eds.): The
development of Large Technical Systems Frankfurt/Main, pp 6-7
57 Hughes: Evolution of Large Technical Systems, pp 57-58
58 Mayntz and Schneider identified three different types of Revers Salients First, technical weak points
directly restrict the system capacity and usually trigger technical improvements Second, overload
problems are often solved by further system extension Third, organizational problems exceed technical
weak points and overload problems, requiring a broader solution Mayntz, Renate; Schneider, Volker
(1995): Die Entwicklung technischer Infrastruktursysteme zwischen Steuerung und Selbstorganisation
In: Mayntz, Renate; Fritz, Scharpf (eds.): Gesellschaftliche Selbstregelung und politische Steuerung
Frankfurt/Main, p 81
59 Hughes: Technological momentum, p 108
60 Hughes: Evolution of Large Technical Systems, pp 52-53
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Trang 36Theoretical approach 31
were seen as drivers for this kind of growth.61 Ingo Braun and Bernward Joerges asserted that
even rare examples of failure could be interpreted as a proof for the growth thesis According
to them, the American railroad or English canal system failed, because they were superseded
by more efficient ones.62 Other scholars pointed to the fact that the further growth and success
of LTSs was closely related to the establishment of modern hierarchically organized states
Centralized states provided the necessary coordination and control to further extend systems
such as rail, electricity, or telephone, which in turn stimulated further centralization of state
structures.63
However, evidence suggested other possible scenarios Rising opposition in Western
societies towards power concentration and technification has caused social upheavals since
the 1970s The trend towards centralization was not only true for nation states in general but
also for electricity generation in particular Closely tied to the administrative structure,
electricity production tended towards centralized, large-scale systems As a reaction to this
trend, discussions about decentralization and regionalization gained importance in Western
societies A decisive reason for the growing disapprobation was the ecological as well as
economic impact of potential failures of evolving LTSs Anti-nuclear movements are just the
most obvious examples Joachim Radkau argued that specialized expert groups, which
con-tribute to system stabilization in the momentum phase, unintentionally add to this discomfort
By developing their own highly specific discourses, they get separated from the broader
public communication Over time, it is hard for non-professionals to understand these
spe-cialized discourses, possibly leading to mistrust.64 Such phenomena persuaded researchers to
extend the LTS periodization schemes Hughes called the described phenomenon
“counterculture” and traced its roots back to the Second World War.65 Other researchers
proposed the idea of stagnation as a phase of evolving systems, since some LTSs clearly
experience periods of non-growth or decline They wondered about the causes of stagnation
and failure of some systems while others manage to recover.66
In order to differentiate the momentum stage, Todd La Porte introduced yet another idea
When the technical complexity of a growing LTS increases, control and management
mechanisms have to become increasingly sophisticated, too So-called high reliability
organizations controlling the LTS operate in sensitive social and political surroundings
61 These concepts are also derived from the field of electricity supply The term load factor is related to the
fact that until today electricity cannot be stored economically on a large scale Therefore, utility managers
are eager to match supply and demand as closely as possible Otherwise, a high capacity share stands idle
for long periods The underlying idea of the term economic mix is similar In order to decrease electricity
generation costs, utilities combine less efficient power plants to carry peak load and more efficient power
plants to carry base load Therefore, utilities usually tend to diversify their power plant complex in order
to include coal-fired plants for base load as well as gas and hydropower to cover peak load demand
62 Joerges, Bernward; Braun, Ingo (1994): Große technische Systeme – erzählt, gedeutet, modelliert In:
Braun, Ingo; Joerges, Bernward (eds.): Technik ohne Grenzen Frankfurt/Main, pp 31-32
63 Mayntz, Schneider: Entwicklung technischer Infrastruktursysteme, pp 96-97
64 Radkau, Joachim (1994): Zum ewigen Wachstum verdammt? Jugend und Alter großer technischer
Systeme In: Braun, Ingo; Joerges, Bernward (eds.): Technik ohne Grenzen Frankfurt/Main, p 98
65 Hughes, Thomas (1989): American genesis A century of invention and technological enthusiasm
1870-1970 New York, pp 21-22
66 Summerton, Jane (1994): Introductory essay: The systems approach to technological change In:
Summerton, Jane (ed.): Changing Large Technical Systems Boulder, p 17
Trang 37because the applied technologies are characterized by a high failure potential The risk further
increases when the LTS functions in a vast geographical area, connecting heterogeneous
regional and ethnic cultures If these control and management mechanisms lack the necessary
effectivity, the consequence can be an erosion of hierarchical authority, a rapid increase in
costs of organizational, economic and social integration as well as growing bureaucratic
apraxia.67 Originally, apraxia was derived from neurology and meant the inability of a person
to perform tasks or coordinated movements due to brain damage If transferred to the field of
LTSs, it describes an increasing loss of control by the administrative center responsible to
operate the LTS in a proper way Concepts like apraxia qualify the strong assumption of
LTSs’ unhampered growth implied by momentum and close the gap between the theoretical
concept and the reality of the late 20th century
There is still another aspect concerning the development of an LTS So-called
contingen-cies have the power to push sociotechnical systems in new directions and even break their
momentum In general, contingencies are all kinds of political, economic, social, technical or
natural events which occur outside the system Such events of large proportions can take
place at every development phase Examples from the LTS literature are wars, crises,
politi-cal revolutions, or technipoliti-cal catastrophes At such times of radipoliti-cal change, new system
builders try to influence the sociotechnical system As Per Högselius points out, it is
important to take into account the development phase of the system In contrast to young
systems, a mature system with significant momentum may resist change.68
In addition to the causes for the growth and decline of LTSs, their geographical extension
attracted the attention of scholars Renate Mayntz and Volker Schneider identified a general
tendency towards cross-border connections following the establishment of national systems
Transnational growth displays similar patterns as national developments, which were
oriented towards the integration of regional networks However, due to a missing
supranati-onal authority, cross-border interconnections are realized by self-organization and voluntary
agreements.69 On the basis of empirical material, further generalizations of transnational
growth were made Arne Kaijser analyzed trans-border integration of electricity and gas
networks in Scandinavia and proposed four categories of international infrastructural
cooperation: (1) purely technical linking across national borders, (2) economic and legal
frameworks for cross-border exchanges, (3) common technical standards, and (4)
harmonized institutional regimes.70
However, the research on transnational energy systems necessitated further extending the
LTS tool kit, since earlier works had concentrated on young development stages Instead of
individual system builders like Edison and Ford, so-called institutional system builders came
into focus Institutional system builders are international organizations, state governments,
67 La Porte, Todd (1994): Large Technical Systems, institutional surprise and challenges to political
legitimacy In: Derlien, Hans-Ulrich; Gerhard, Uta; Scharpf, Fritz (eds.): Systemrationalität und
Partialinteresse Baden-Baden, pp 437-438
68 Högselius, Per (2006): Connecting East and West? Electricity systems in the Baltic region In: Van der
Vleuten, Erik; Kaijser, Arne (eds.): Networking Europe Transnational infrastructures and the shaping of
Europe; 1850–2000 Sagamore Beach, p 247
69 Mayntz; Schneider: Entwicklung technischer Infrastruktursysteme, p 78
70 Kaijser, Arne (1997): Trans-border integration of electricity and gas in the Nordic countries 1915-1992
Polhem 15, pp 8-9
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Trang 38Theoretical approach 33
or interest groups, pushing forward the construction of large-scale networks like railroads,
roads, or electricity grids.71 These organizations are platforms for discussion and negotiations
between parties of member countries with diverse interests Therefore, the focus on
instituti-onal system builders necessarily links natiinstituti-onal and internatiinstituti-onal perspectives Especially the
research into infrastructures is fertile ground for studying the work of supranational actors
like international organizations, global firms, or transnational regulatory institutions, because
they engaged in transnational infrastructure programs Scholars proposed a precise research
agenda by suggesting foci on (1) the ideological framing of transnational infrastructures, (2)
the sociotechnical system building practices, and (3) negotiation processes among involved
parties.72
Related to the concept of institutional system builders, there was another addition to the
LTS approach By coining the term “hidden integration,” Thomas Misa and Johan Schot
wanted to draw attention toward the linking and delinking of trans-border infrastructures and
the circulation and appropriation of products, systems, and knowledge They suggested that
the movement of goods, information, services, and people would establish new ties among
users and citizens.73 Researchers emphasized that the overall aim of these transnational
approaches was not to exclude national perspectives but rather to combine them
Transnati-onal networking processes were important arenas for discussion and significantly influenced
politics, economy, and societies Such processes reflected the intense interaction between the
national and transnational level.74
These fertile extensions of the LTS approach triggered a whole series of studies focusing
mainly on Western Europe and the evolution of European integration from a technical point
of view Vincent Lagendijk explored the development of an increasingly integrated West
European electricity network and the ideas that lied behind this endeavor.75 In recent years,
researchers have increasingly paid attention to historical developments in Eastern Europe
applying some aspects of the LTS approach like hidden integration or system builders Per
Högselius focused on East-West relations in the Cold War and described in detail, how and
why the first gas pipelines between the Soviet Union and Western Europe had come into
being.76 Ivaylo Hristov shed light on the question of how Bulgaria’s nuclear power system
developed in the context of transnational nuclear networks within and beyond the Eastern
Bloc.77 Nevertheless, it is still open for discussion if the LTS approach, which had been
developed on the basis of studies on infrastructures in market economies, can be successfully
applied to phenomena in the specific environment of planned economies
71 Van der Vleuten, Erik (2006): Understanding network societies: Two decades of Large Technical System
studies In: Van der Vleuten, Erik; Kaijser, Arne (eds.): Networking Europe Transnational infrastructures
and the shaping of Europe; 1850–2000 Sagamore Beach, p 305
72 Van der Vleuten, Erik; Anastasiadou, Irene; Lagendijk, Vincent; Schipper, Frank (2007): Europe’s
System Builders: The contested shaping of transnational road, electricity and rail networks In:
Contemporary European History 16/3, p 328
73 Misa, Thomas; Schot, Johan (2005): Inventing Europe Technology and the hidden integration of Europe
In: History and Technology 21/1, pp 12-13
74 Van der Vleuten, Kaijser: Transnational networks, p 5
75 Lagendijk: Electrifying Europe
76 Högselius, Per (2013): Red gas Russia and the origins of European energy dependence Basingstoke
77 Hristov, Ivaylo (2014): The communist nuclear era Bulgarian atomic community during the Cold War,
1944-1986 Amsterdam
Trang 391.6.2 Critical assessment
A weakness of the LTS approach is the ambiguous definition of its main object of study, the
Large Technological System This fact has been repeatedly criticized by scholars.78 The
reason for this is the high diversity of case studies referring to the LTS approach A
genera-lization as a necessary starting point for a precise definition of LTSs was rejected by several
researchers They pointed to the fact that the examined cases were too specific and
historically unique.79 Other scholars in turn urged for a generalization in order to identify a
general pattern on which to build a theory They in turn bemoaned the “endemic” descriptive
historiography.80 Researchers have increasingly accepted this diversity and stopped to aim
for a universal definition of LTS.81 Apart from the ambiguous definition, Erik van der
Vleuten drew attention to the double meaning of LTS On the one hand, LTS refers to a
category of phenomena On the other hand, it is a research methodology He stressed that the
LTS approach was meant to be applicable not only to LTSs themselves but to any other kind
of technology, too Therefore, a distinction between those two meanings would be
advisable.82
Another point of criticism was the fact that many studies primarily focused on stories of
successful LTSs and neglected cases of failed technological innovation This asymmetry
eventually contributed to the notion of a rather linear system growth.83 A reason for this could
be that the detection of failed approaches especially in early development stages is difficult
Usually, they are forgotten after a while, leaving few traces in individual and collective
memories These circumstances further contribute to the bias towards success stories
Furthermore, researchers criticized that users are largely absent in LTS studies.84 The same
is true for ecology as an independent research topic in LTS discourses.85 In sharp contrast to
managers, engineers, or regulators, the influence of users as well as ecological thinking was
disregarded In the last years, however, some progress has been made to overcome these
topical restrictions.86
Another weakness of the LTS approach is the unspecified interaction between the
environment and the sociotechnical system By proposing the concept of contingencies,
which are historical events with a strong impact on the further development of the LTS,
researchers indicated the huge importance of the outside world for system growth However,
this concept is not well-elaborated, and it is up to the individual researcher which events to
78 Joerges; Braun: Große technische Systeme, p 7 Van der Vleuten, Erik (2004): Infrastructures and societal
change A view from the Large Technical Systems field In: Technology Analysis & Strategic
Management 16/3, p 400
79 Radkau: Zum ewigen Wachstum verdammt, p 52 Joerges; Braun: Große technische Systeme, pp 22-23
80 Bijker, Wiebe; Pinch, Trevor (1993): The Social construction of facts and artifacts In: Bijker, Wiebe;
Hughes, Thomas; Pinch, Trevor (eds.): The social construction of technological systems New directions
in the sociology and history of technology Cambridge, p 22
81 Van der Vleuten: Understanding network societies, p 282
82 Van der Vleuten: Infrastructures and societal change, p 399
83 Bijker; Pinch: Social construction of facts and artifacts, p 22
84 Summerton: The systems approach to technological change, p 17
85 Joerges, Bernward (1994): Reden über große Technik Berlin, p 31
86 On the crucial influence of consumers on the design and development of LTSs, see Oldenziel, Ruth; Hård,
Mikael (2013): Consumers, tinkerers, rebels The people who shaped Europe London: Palgrave
Macmillan
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Trang 40Theoretical approach 35
classify as contingencies Some contingencies proposed by the LTS literature, such as the
nuclear disasters at Three Mile Island or Chernobyl, occurred inside the system,87 while other
phenomena such as the First World War or the oil crises developed in a global context
How-ever, there is a difference for the further development of a system whether the shock came
from inside or outside Causes of external shocks are not under the control of system builders
In order to clarify this ambiguity, I propose the wording “internal” and “external” shock
instead of the vague term “contingency.” Consequently, I will apply these two terms to events
occurring inside or outside the system, with a significant impact on the further development
of LTSs
In general, the LTS approach provides a suitable framework for structuring the field of
research Although Thomas Hughes initially focused on the development of young
socio-technical systems, other scholars increasingly broadened the scope of attention This
exten-sion is crucial for my own research, since the focus is not on the very beginnings of energy
infrastructures but on cross-border linking and de-linking of already established national
networks This study will test some of the instruments offered by the LTS tool kit In doing
so, the LTS approach can direct attention to phenomena at the macro, meso, and micro level
of transnational energy infrastructures in the Eastern Bloc
1.6.3 Applied concepts
The aim of the preceding two sections was describing and assessing the LTS approach
However, I will not use all the concepts offered by the LTS tool kit for my research on energy
infrastructures in the Eastern Bloc In the following section, I will explain which concepts
could be revealing for my research and to which historical phenomena I will try to apply
them
The concept of institutional system builders is well-suited to approaching the issue of
international cooperation in the Eastern Bloc concerning the construction of cross-border
infrastructures The CMEA was the major platform for discussion, although debates were
usually not straightforward, and crucial decisions were regularly made on the bilateral
inter-governmental level
The concept of reverse salients can provide revealing insights, since it points to technical
or organizational frictions hampering the further evolution of the entire system What kind
of reverse salients did emerge, and in which way did the CMEA as an institutional system
builders try to overcome them? An example is the IIB, established by CMEA countries in
1970 to overcome financing bottlenecks regarding major investment projects like the Soi͡uz
gas pipeline
The notion of technological transfer will highlight examples of technologies transferred
from the West to the Eastern Bloc and asks how they were adapted there A famous example
is the Soviet Water-Water Energetic Reactor (VVER) technology colloquially called
Eastinghouse, because it was an adaption of the Westinghouse light water reactor West-East
technology transfers were a large-scale phenomenon in the context of major construction
projects in the Eastern Bloc The subsequent adaptation within bloc-wide frameworks shaped
by political, legal, or historical factors resulted in diverse technological styles An example
87 For an insightful analysis of the Three Mile Island accident near Harrisburg, see Perrow, Charles (1984):
Normal accidents Living with high-risk technologies New York: Basic Books