This helped to energise Opec and laid the basis for the oil price rises of 1973.
From the guardian.co.uk
I want to help focus, motivate and energise to achieve these efficiency savings.
From the guardian.co.uk
So long as voting is voluntary parties'best strategy is to energise their base.
From the economist.com
The mere fact you'd written to The Observer seemed to energise the Cooperative.
From the guardian.co.uk
Find that pursuit that will energise you, consume you, become an obsession.
From the blog.beliefnet.com
The EU liberalisation campaign is starting to energise national regulators.
From the economist.com
Occupy Wall Street activists hope the call would re-energise the movement.
From the guardian.co.uk
Fragrances can help reduce stress and relax or invigorate and energise.
From the telegraph.co.uk
Another opportunity of sorts was to energise Congress in state elections.
From the economist.com
More examples
Excite: raise to a higher energy level; "excite the atoms"
Stimulate: cause to be alert and energetic; "Coffee and tea stimulate me"; "This herbal infusion doesn't stimulate"
(energising) energizing: supplying motive force; "the complex civilization of which Rome was the kinetic center"- H.O.Taylor
To invigorate, to make energetic; To supply with energy, especially electricity. To turn on power to something
(energised) Alternative spelling of energized
(energised) Electrically livened, or connected to or containing some other source of energy e.g. steam, compressed air, hydraulic energy etc.
(Energisation) Removing negative energy and imparting Positive Energy. In Geo Biology, there are machines which effectuate this energisation like the Geopathic Stress Reverser.