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Edward Chow, a senior fellow in the CSIS Energy Program, is an international energy expert with 30 years of oil industry experience. He has worked in Asia, the Middle East, Africa, South America, Europe, and the former Soviet Union. Specializing in government policy and business strategy—particularly on investments in emerging economies and international oil and gas negotiations—he spent 20 years working with Chevron Corporation in the United States and overseas. Chow is a graduate of Ohio University with a bachelor’s degree in economics and a master’s in international affairs. He has published articles in leading academic and foreign policy journals and spoken at energy conferences in the United States, United Kingdom, Russia, Germany, Turkey, and China. Recent publications include:
“From Victory to Success: Why Oil Won’t Be a Quick Fix,” Foreign Policy (July/August 2003). “U.S.-Russia Energy Dialogue: Policy, Projects or Photo Op?” Foreign Service Journal (December 2003). “Russian Pipelines: Back to the Future,” Georgetown Journal of International Affairs (Winter/Spring 2004). “Hurricane Katrina and US Energy Security” (coauthored with Jonathan Elkind), Survival (December 2005).
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