In: International Trade and Environmental Justice ISBN: 978-1-60876-426-6
Editors: A. Hornborg, A.K. Jorgensen, pp. © 2009 Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
NON-FINAL VERSION
PAGE NUMBERING DIFFERENT FROM ORIGINAL
Chapter 4
INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN FUEL
COMMODITIES: A NETWORK APPROACH
Carl Nordlund
Human Ecology Division, Lund University, Sweden
Much as the contemporary understanding of world trade is often based on
simple models where two countries engage in trade, so is world trade in fuel
commodities typically conceived as consisting of either net-importing or net-
exporting countries. However, by paying attention to the structure of world trade,
represented by actually occurring trade flows between the actors in such networks,
it becomes evident that the structures of such networks are far more complex than
intuitively understood. In this chapter, role-analytical tools from social network
analysis are applied to bilateral fuel commodity trade flows between 85 countries.
Using a novel heuristic for identifying ties between role-equivalent sets of actors,
this chapter maps the structure of fuel commodity trade by looking at both the
value of such trade flows as well as the non-monetary energy dimension of such
flows. Comparing these structural maps with a typological Galtung-style core-
periphery structure shows significant similarities, although at a resolution that
reveals the existence of 6-8 different roles, expanding the simple, intuitive
distinction between net-importers and net-exporters.