话语趋势及其对塞内加尔可再生能源转向的社会生态影响

van den Bold Mara
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引用次数: 0

摘要

到2025年,塞内加尔的能源结构将从依赖重质燃料油转变为主要由太阳能、风能和液化天然气组成。人们期望这将带来更低的温室气体排放,更实惠的电力,以及广泛的增长和发展。尽管向可再生能源过渡是必要的,但关键能源地理领域的学者警告说,这种过渡可能(重新)产生社会环境不公正。然而,在可再生能源文献的政治生态学中,只有相对较少(但不断增加)的研究考察了能源转型是如何被构建和证明为全球南方国家层面叙事的一部分的。理解这一点至关重要,因为将(可再生)能源与国家发展目标联系起来是可再生能源项目材料开发的核心战略。通过对塞内加尔的案例研究,本文通过分析关键文件和机构访谈(在2018年至2020年之间进行),研究了该国转向公用事业规模可再生能源的国家级话语。研究结果表明,主导的发展参与者群体与国家机构一起,动员了一种关于经济增长和减少贫困的“宏大叙事”,而不是可再生能源的发展,以促进向基于市场逻辑的可再生能源的转变,这对公平和正义的影响值得怀疑。本文反映了这一叙述对塞内加尔能源转型潜力的影响,以及该研究的更广泛的理论和实证影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Discursive trends and their socio-ecological implications in Senegal's renewable energy turn

By 2025, Senegal's energy mix will have shifted from one reliant on heavy fuel oil to one consisting primarily of solar and wind energy as well as liquefied natural gas. The expectation is that this will lead to lower greenhouse gas emissions, more affordable power, and broad-based growth and development. Despite the necessity of a transition to renewable energy, scholarship in critical energy geographies has cautioned that such a transition could (re)produce socio-environmental injustices. Yet only a relatively small (but growing) number of studies in the political ecology of renewable energy literature examines how energy transitions are framed and justified as part of national-level narratives in the global South. Understanding this is critical because framing (renewable) energy in relation to national development objectives is a strategy central to the material development of renewable energy projects. Through a case study of Senegal, this paper examines the national-level discourses that underlie the country's turn towards utility-scale renewable energy by analyzing key documents and institutional interviews (carried out between 2018 and 2020). Findings show that a dominant group of development actors along with state institutions mobilizes a “grand narrative” on economic growth and poverty reduction vis a vis renewable energy development to facilitate a shift to renewables that rests on market logics, with questionable implications for equity and justice. The paper reflects on the implications of this narrative for the potential of a just energy transition in Senegal, as well as the broader theoretical and empirical implications of the research.

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