太阳能、国家权力与摩洛哥前撒哈拉地区能源转型的政治

Solar power, state power, and the politics of energy transition in pre-Saharan Morocco

Environment and Planning A Economy and Space · 2015
被引 160 · 同刊同年前 4%
ABS 3

中文导读

研究了摩洛哥太阳能计划首个项目(瓦尔扎扎特光热电站)的起源,揭示政府征地如何沿用殖民时期的剥夺策略,并将民众反对转化为技术问题,从而掩盖项目背后的社会生态关系。

Abstract

In 2009, the Kingdom of Morocco embarked on the Solar Plan, an ambitious 10-year plan to become a leading solar power producer. This paper examines the genesis of the first project in the plan, a concentrated solar power plant near the pre-Saharan city of Ouarzazate, in order to explore the “energy transition” as a political as well as geographic project. I specifically address how the government's acquisition of land drew on colonial strategies for dispossession that were subsequently embraced by the post-colonial state. At the same time, bureaucratic processes for responding to community demands effectively narrowed popular opposition to a set of technocratic problems to be solved by development interventions. The official discourse of global environmental remediation obscured the socio-ecological relations at work in the project, constructing the land as marginal so as to facilitate investment and foreclosing resident's broader political claims. Attending to the political dynamics surrounding solar power challenges assumptions that an energy transition necessarily involves a transition away from an environmentally destructive carbon-based economy—or from the forms of governmentality that support current energy regimes.

能源转型政治经济学可再生能源国家治理土地政治