Energy Colonialism: A Category to Analyse the Corporate Energy Transition in the Global South and North
Abstract
:1. Introduction and Objectives
2. Materials and Methods
3. Exploring the Category of Energy Colonialism
4. The Category of Energy Colonialism
- (1)
- The geopolitical dimension.
- (2)
- The dimension of economic and financial inequalities.
- (3)
- The dimension of power, violence, and decision making.
- (4)
- The dimension of land grabbing and dispossession.
- (5)
- The dimension of impacts on territory and commons.
- (6)
- The dimension of resistance and socio-territorial conflicts.
5. Case Studies of Energy Colonialism
5.1. First Case: The Wind Corridor of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico
5.2. Second Case: The Fosen Vind DA Project on Saami Territory in Norway
5.3. Third Case: Rural Territories of Spain
5.4. Fourth Case: Occupied Territories of Western Sahara
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions: From Energy Colonialism to Decolonial Energy Futures
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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The Wind Corridor of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico. | The Fosen Vind DA Projects on Saami Territory, Norway. | Occupied Territories of Western Sahara. | Rural Areas of Spain. | |
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The geopolitical dimension. | Twenty-nine wind farms in operation currently represent the installation of 1564 wind turbines developed on a total area of 31,000 ha of social (communal) tenure territories. Production for large companies, far away from the producing territories. | Six wind farms with 278 turbines produce 3.6 TWh a year. A total of 151 turbines, transformation stations, and 130 km of roads were built on Saami reindeer herding lands. | Occupied by Morocco since 1976. Nine wind projects (1870 MW) and five solar photovoltaic (655 MW). Energy for Morocco and in the future for Europe. | The production forecast is 209,386 GW in a country with an average consumption of 30 GW. The energy would be transported to Europe through two electrical interconnections with France and another three within the 5th list of Projects of Common European Interest. |
The dimension of economic and financial inequalities. | The main investors in this wind farm corridor are European and US companies. There is a direct relationship between mining and extractivism in nearby territories and wind farms. | More than half of the investments come from Norwegian state and regional companies, while the rest mainly comes from German and Swiss pension funds. So-called “green certificate” schemes were introduced by the Norwegian government to boost the expansion of the industry, and wind energy companies enjoy favourable tax rates. | Four of the nine wind megaprojects are from a company owned by the king (NAREVA). Multinationals benefit from megaprojects. The refugee population and indigenous neighbourhoods suffer from energy shortages. | A total of 80% of the Spanish electricity sector is in the hands of private companies. A total of 17% of the population spends a very high percentage of their salary on energy. The operator of the electrical network (TSO) is 80% private. |
The dimension of power, violence, and decision making. | There was a breach of the International Labor Organization’s Convention No. 169 on the rights of Indigenous Peoples’. Indigenous queries were poorly developed. Violence and systematic violations of Human Rights. | Consultations were carried out with the impacted communities, but lacked free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC) from the Saami people and their representative institutions. The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) requested to temporarily halt the construction, but this was ignored by the Norwegian state in 2018. In October 2021, the Supreme Court of Norway ruled that two of the projects violate Article 27 of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) as they prevent the impacted Saami reindeer herding communities from practising their culture. | The Saharawi people have never been consulted. The violence of the occupying state is extreme, as has been documented by Human Rights organisations. | In 2012, the EU, the ECB and the IMF forced Spain to complete its electrical interconnection with Europe. Legislation that favours megaprojects (82% of photovoltaics in 2017 were large-scale > 1 MW). Low-intensity violence against the opposition to this deployment. |
The dimension of land grabbing and dispossession. | The privatisation of communal lands is intensifying due to the fact that companies do not respect communal ownership and assembly figures that are recognised in the Mexican regulations and in ILO 169, the Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention. Companies make individual contracts with small landowners that only gain 1% of the benefits over 50 years. | The projects occupy crucial winter pastures for reindeer. Despite the verdict from the Supreme Court that ruled the expropriation of Saami land-use rights illegal, the Norwegian state has not removed the infrastructure and returned the lands to the impacted reindeer herding community. | The megaprojects continue with the Moroccan dispossession of the land and homes of the Saharawi people according to the illegal occupation of Western Sahara. Mining companies and agri-export industries as examples of extractivist activities use the energy produced in megaprojects. | Regional and state regulations, such as the Law of 16 December 1954 on forced expropriation, allow increased land grabbing because expropriation can be performed by declaring the renewable energy projects as public utilities, even though most projects are private. |
The dimension of impacts on territory and common goods. | Serious impacts on traditional land use as farming activities are forbidden in the area occupied by renewable energies. Serious effects on biodiversity, especially birds. | Research and experiences from Saami herders show that reindeer avoid areas of wind energy infrastructure up to 10 km. The loss of crucial winter pastures and their cultural landscape is threatening the existence of the entire southern Saami culture on the peninsula. | The transformation of traditional agricultural and livestock territories destroys the landscapes and biocultural practices. The water used by megaprojects means more water stress in a place that is already very dry. | The occupation of 2,837,740 ha has been planned. Large territorial impacts of current megaprojects and enormous future impacts from this deployment. There is no territorial planning for renewable energies, and the current regulations do not require impact assessments. |
The dimension of resistance and socio-territorial conflicts. | Grassroots assemblies are recovered to resist wind megaprojects. Collectives and organisations are created by environmental defenders where there are no assemblies. Demonstrations and legal complaints are filed. Two wind megaprojects have been halted as a result of the resistance. | The impacted communities and Saami institutions have mobilised to stop the projects through political and legal means. Saami organisations and environmentalist allies have carried out protest marches and civil disobedience actions since 2016. In February 2023, hundreds of protesters blocked several Ministries to demand that the Norwegian government complies with the Supreme Court verdict. | The anti-colonial movements and the POLISARIO Front have mobilised against the energy megaprojects. | There are several hundred organisations that are resisting the energy megaprojects, in some cases, for at least a decade. In 2020 the Energy Alliance (ALIENTE) was created as a platform for more than 200 collectives. |
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Sánchez Contreras, J.; Matarán Ruiz, A.; Campos-Celador, A.; Fjellheim, E.M. Energy Colonialism: A Category to Analyse the Corporate Energy Transition in the Global South and North. Land 2023, 12, 1241. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12061241
Sánchez Contreras J, Matarán Ruiz A, Campos-Celador A, Fjellheim EM. Energy Colonialism: A Category to Analyse the Corporate Energy Transition in the Global South and North. Land. 2023; 12(6):1241. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12061241
Chicago/Turabian StyleSánchez Contreras, Josefa, Alberto Matarán Ruiz, Alvaro Campos-Celador, and Eva Maria Fjellheim. 2023. "Energy Colonialism: A Category to Analyse the Corporate Energy Transition in the Global South and North" Land 12, no. 6: 1241. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12061241
APA StyleSánchez Contreras, J., Matarán Ruiz, A., Campos-Celador, A., & Fjellheim, E. M. (2023). Energy Colonialism: A Category to Analyse the Corporate Energy Transition in the Global South and North. Land, 12(6), 1241. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12061241