Hassan Ahmed writes on energy policy, international trade, and regulatory governance, focusing on how legal and institutional frameworks shape market dynamics, infrastructure resiliency, and transnational cooperation—particularly within NATO and the broader transatlantic context.

He holds a J.D. from the University of Alberta Faculty of Law, where he specialized in administrative and regulatory law, and a B.A. in Philosophy and Political Science from the University of Calgary.

Energy Security Uncategorized

Rules not Rockets: Energy Regulation as Foreign Policy by Other Means

Energy security debates often focus on supply: who produces energy, who transports it, and who depends on whom. This framing has centered on the nexus between physical assets and trade flows—pipelines, terminals, generation capacity, and shipping routes. Increasingly, however, strategic vulnerability is shaped less by the location of infrastructure than by who controls it and Read More…

Security, Trade and the Economy

Who Owns the Infrastructure?

Foreign Investment, Market Structure, and NATO Economic Security Russia’s invasion of Ukraine marked a turning point in how NATO understands economic security. The immediate response was necessarily focused on energy: securing supply, diversifying imports, and hardening critical infrastructure against disruption. These efforts were essential. They reflected a growing recognition that dependence on hostile or unreliable Read More…

Energy Security

Special Report: The Case for Canada to Become an Allied Energy Superpower

Introduction The 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine has forced NATO to acknowledge the weaponization of energy. Electric grid coercion, gas cut-offs and cyber-intrusions into critical energy infrastructure and pipeline flow manipulation all represent core structural vulnerabilities of the European security architecture. NATO has responded by moving energy security from the periphery of its security planning Read More…