Yannis Bassias

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Mr. Yannis Bassias is an energy analyst and former President and CEO of the Hellenic Hydrocarbon Resources Management Company (HHRM), where he played a key role in shaping Greece’s national strategy for hydrocarbons and energy security. He also participated in the early organizational stages of the National Energy and Climate Committee (NECC), during the phase when its core principles and technical specifications were defined. He writes in the Greek and international press, offering technical analyses on the energy mix and the economic dimensions of the transition, and has advised municipalities in Western Macedonia on the development of energy and mineral resources. He brings more than thirty years of international experience in reservoir evaluation, technical project development, and petroleum portfolio management, having led multinational teams and corporate groups in France and the United States. His work includes offshore projects in West and North Africa, the Mozambique Channel, and the central–southern Atlantic. His career began in academic research at the Free University of Berlin, focusing on Northwest Africa, and later as Associate Professor at the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, specializing in the genesis of the Indian Ocean. He is a graduate of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, holds a PhD from Pierre and Marie Curie University, and completed postgraduate studies in business administration and economics in Paris. He has been a Fellow of the Council of Europe and a research scholar of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. His publications appear in international scientific and industry journals, and he has co edited three marine expedition reports on the Indian Ocean.

Exclusive articles:

Layered Anelasticities: When New Shocks Arrive Before Old Ones Heal

The global energy system increasingly behaves like a material under continuous deformation; anelasticity is the incomplete recovery after stress, while hysteresis is the persistence...

The Continent That Believed Geopolitics Had Ended

For more than three decades, Europe behaved as if history had granted it a permanent exemption from geopolitics. The end of the Cold War,...

How Shock, Timing, and Industrial Strategy Are Rewriting the LNG Era

The global LNG market is no longer shaped by familiar cycles of tightness and surplus. It is now defined by inelasticity, a structural rigidity...

When Elasticity Fails: The New Fragility of the Global Energy System

The confrontation in the Persian Gulf has not created new vulnerabilities. It has revealed the architecture of a global energy system that has been...

Strait of Hormuz: Escalation and the Mechanics of a Regional Shock

What began as a single strike on 28 February 2026 quickly spiraled beyond containment. Iranian retaliation swept across U.S. installations in the United Arab...

How Materials, Infrastructure, and Geopolitics Redefine the 2030 Energy Transition

And while grid physics remains the starting point, the innovations shaping the 2030 landscape extend far beyond conductors and transmission lines. The energy transition...

Offshore Exploration South of Crete: Greece Moves from Hesitation to Strategic Discipline

The recent activation of offshore exploration in the two deep-water areas south of Crete, as well as in the southern Ionian Sea, marks a...

Heavy Oil and Venezuela’s Shifting Role

Venezuela’s place in global energy history is far more substantial than today’s production figures suggest. During the Second World War, the country was nothing...

A Critical Turning Point for Underground CO₂ Storage Development in the European Union

Authors: Yannis Bassias and Evangelos Flitris* Europe finds itself at a moment where industrial competitiveness, energy security, and climate ambition must be reconciled. The slow...

When Physics Meets Politics: The 2026 Global Energy Inflection Point

In 2026, the mask of the “seamless transition” has fallen, exposing a gritty, hardware‑constrained reality. The global energy map is no longer painted in...

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Twenty-One Miles: The Geography That Held the World Hostage

Twenty-one miles. That is the width of the Strait...

Diplomacy in Motion: India’s Gulf Calculus Amid Regional Crisis

Warning against the rising interdependence in the international system,...
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