后碳未来?

A. Holm, E. Eklund
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引用次数: 2

摘要

澳大利亚的拉特罗布山谷是一个转型中的资源社区。后碳时代的未来尚未实现,而近期的未来是一个经济不确定的未来。自20世纪20年代初以来,一个州和国民经济就建立在褐煤(或褐煤)能源生产的基础上,但国际和国内市场以及燃煤电力经济不断变化的现实正在使其价值下降。当然,采矿和发电的后果是留给山谷的居民去体验的。2017年关闭的Hazelwood发电厂和Morwell或Hazelwood露天煤矿(自2014年煤矿火灾以来一直被称为Morwell或Hazelwood露天煤矿)被证明是硅谷未来没有褐煤发电的转折点。本文以拉特罗布山谷为例,探讨政府和企业对转型的效果图,特别是Hazelwood电站的关闭。我们引入了“提取意义”的概念,以理解和理论化政府和煤炭相关公司使用集体记忆和口述历史的结构来唤起叙事的方式,但这似乎更类似于试图编纂,限制和剥夺其意义的流行和地方经验的实践。区域记忆和口述历史被一套强有力的话语所覆盖。在这一探索性分析中,我们认为,在这一版本的区域重组中,新自由主义得到了充分的发挥,历史和遗产随着强有力的政府和企业方向的变化而不断变化,以协助当前的政策优先事项,即使在方言解释区域变化的不和谐因素仍然可见。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Post-Carbon Future?
The Latrobe Valley, Australia, is a resource community in transition. The post-carbon future has yet to be realised, and the immediate future is one of economic uncertainty. A state and national economy was built upon energy production from brown coal (or lignite) since the early 1920s, but the realities of changing international and national markets and economies for coal-fired electricity are seeing its value diminish. The consequences of mining and power generation, of course, were left to be experienced by the residents of the Valley. The 2017 closure of Hazelwood Power Station and the Morwell or Hazelwood open-cut mine (as it has been called since the 2014 mine fire) proved to be the Valley’s tipping point for a future without brown coal generation. This article uses the case study of the Latrobe Valley to explore government and corporate renderings of the transition, and the closure of Hazelwood Power Station in particular. We introduce the concept of “extractive meaningˮ to understand and theorise the way that narratives are evoked by government and coal-related corporations that use the structures of collective memory and oral history, but that appear to be more akin to practices that seek to codify, confine, and strip popular and local experience of its meaning. Regional memory and oral history are blanketed under a powerful set of discourses. In this exploratory analysis, we contend that in this version of regional restructuring neo-liberalism is given full rein, history and heritage are in flux with strong Government and corporate direction to assist current policy priorities, even whilst dissonant elements of a vernacular interpretation of regional changes are still discernible.
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