The Eastern vector of Russia's energy policy has the effects of the investment shock on the fuel and energy power complex industry of the Far East,which has implemented a series of investment projects in order to in-crease export supplies of fuel and energy resources to the Asia-Pacific coun-tries.There were the shifts in the structure of fuel and energy resources pro-duction in the region over the period from 2012 to 2019.In calculations,we use the classical and spatial versions of the method of structural decomposition of the growth rates of the sectoral indicators(shift-share analysis).On the basis of structural decomposition of the changes on the average annual number of employees and the GV A of the fuel and energy complex of the Far East at different spatial levels(national,macroregional(interregional)and regional)we draw the following conclusions:a strong impulse for development in the framework of the Eastern vector of Russia's energy policy was given to extrac-tive industries,and their competitive effects were positive and overrode the negative shocks,which were destabilizing the national economy;an important factor in the economic dynamics of the extractive industries of the fuel and en-ergy complex were gains/losses in inter-regional competition,but not spatial externalities;in the oil and gas industry,unlike in the coal industry,there is potential for formation of spatial externalities;developing faster than others,extractive industries remain enclaves in regional economies.The original arti-cle was published in the Russian journal Spatial Economics:Economics and Sociology,No.4,2022.With the consent of the author,it is published in Si-berian Studies in Chinese.
fuel and energy complexEastern vector of Russia's energy poli-cyinvestment projectshift-share analysisinterregional interactionlocal competitivenessspatial externalitiesFar East