"The companies are powerful, people are weak": India's solar energy ambitions and the legitimation of dispossession in Rajasthan

Ecological degradation and climate change have led to widespread calls for altering sociotechnical practices. A sector in which this is particularly visible is energy; more specifically, in efforts to displace conventional sources of energy (e.g., thermal) in favor of lower-carbon alternatives (e.g....

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Main Authors: Berenice Girard, Shayan Shokrgozar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2024-01-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.librarypublishing.arizona.edu/jpe/article/id/5410/
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author Berenice Girard
Shayan Shokrgozar
author_facet Berenice Girard
Shayan Shokrgozar
author_sort Berenice Girard
collection DOAJ
description Ecological degradation and climate change have led to widespread calls for altering sociotechnical practices. A sector in which this is particularly visible is energy; more specifically, in efforts to displace conventional sources of energy (e.g., thermal) in favor of lower-carbon alternatives (e.g., solar power). Despite the liberatory potentials of lower-carbon energy sources, a growing body of political ecology scholarship suggests that energy "transitions" perpetuate fossil fuel dynamics of extractivism, land dispossession, and commodification processes. More specifically, incumbent actors and ideas prevent otherwise socially, economically, and technically just alternatives from materializing through legitimating socioecologically unjust practices. Amidst these developments, India eyes global leadership on solar energy; with Rajasthan, in its western desert reaches, hosting the largest installed capacity in the nation and largest solar plant in the world, Bhadla. Drawing from qualitative field research including site visits, over 70 semi-structured and informal interviews, and discourse analysis of solar policy documents, we interrogate how the deployment of solar "parks" are legitimated by state-level political and technocratic powers, despite their socioecological implications for local residents, especially agropastoralists, and endangered other-than-humans. Grounding our work in political ecology and reflecting on the politics behind energy policies, we counter depoliticizing narratives of solar development, concluding that solar "parks", though presented as apolitical, are rooted in a political paradigm which combines ecological modernization and the ongoing neoliberalization of the Indian political economy.
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spelling doaj.art-4dbe8940128647b49c1b4b4b7b24244d2024-02-29T16:21:36ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512024-01-0131110.2458/jpe.5410"The companies are powerful, people are weak": India's solar energy ambitions and the legitimation of dispossession in RajasthanBerenice Girard0Shayan Shokrgozar1Media and Social Studies, University of Stavanger; Centre de Sciences Humaines, DelhiGeography, University of BergenEcological degradation and climate change have led to widespread calls for altering sociotechnical practices. A sector in which this is particularly visible is energy; more specifically, in efforts to displace conventional sources of energy (e.g., thermal) in favor of lower-carbon alternatives (e.g., solar power). Despite the liberatory potentials of lower-carbon energy sources, a growing body of political ecology scholarship suggests that energy "transitions" perpetuate fossil fuel dynamics of extractivism, land dispossession, and commodification processes. More specifically, incumbent actors and ideas prevent otherwise socially, economically, and technically just alternatives from materializing through legitimating socioecologically unjust practices. Amidst these developments, India eyes global leadership on solar energy; with Rajasthan, in its western desert reaches, hosting the largest installed capacity in the nation and largest solar plant in the world, Bhadla. Drawing from qualitative field research including site visits, over 70 semi-structured and informal interviews, and discourse analysis of solar policy documents, we interrogate how the deployment of solar "parks" are legitimated by state-level political and technocratic powers, despite their socioecological implications for local residents, especially agropastoralists, and endangered other-than-humans. Grounding our work in political ecology and reflecting on the politics behind energy policies, we counter depoliticizing narratives of solar development, concluding that solar "parks", though presented as apolitical, are rooted in a political paradigm which combines ecological modernization and the ongoing neoliberalization of the Indian political economy.http://journals.librarypublishing.arizona.edu/jpe/article/id/5410/solar energypolitical ecologyrenewable energyenergy transitionspostdevelopmentIndia
spellingShingle Berenice Girard
Shayan Shokrgozar
"The companies are powerful, people are weak": India's solar energy ambitions and the legitimation of dispossession in Rajasthan
Journal of Political Ecology
solar energy
political ecology
renewable energy
energy transitions
postdevelopment
India
title "The companies are powerful, people are weak": India's solar energy ambitions and the legitimation of dispossession in Rajasthan
title_full "The companies are powerful, people are weak": India's solar energy ambitions and the legitimation of dispossession in Rajasthan
title_fullStr "The companies are powerful, people are weak": India's solar energy ambitions and the legitimation of dispossession in Rajasthan
title_full_unstemmed "The companies are powerful, people are weak": India's solar energy ambitions and the legitimation of dispossession in Rajasthan
title_short "The companies are powerful, people are weak": India's solar energy ambitions and the legitimation of dispossession in Rajasthan
title_sort the companies are powerful people are weak india s solar energy ambitions and the legitimation of dispossession in rajasthan
topic solar energy
political ecology
renewable energy
energy transitions
postdevelopment
India
url http://journals.librarypublishing.arizona.edu/jpe/article/id/5410/
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