The scare behind energy security: four conceptualisations of scarcity and a never-ending search for abundance

While the number of definitions and metrics of energy security have expanded rapidly (Ang et al. 2015; Sovacool and Mukherjee 2011), surprisingly little attention has been paid to its core concern: the fear of doing without. Shortages and scarcities are the problem to be solved, hardly ever the obje...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kester, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2021
_version_ 1826308599239933952
author Kester, J
author_facet Kester, J
author_sort Kester, J
collection OXFORD
description While the number of definitions and metrics of energy security have expanded rapidly (Ang et al. 2015; Sovacool and Mukherjee 2011), surprisingly little attention has been paid to its core concern: the fear of doing without. Shortages and scarcities are the problem to be solved, hardly ever the object of study itself. Inspired by critical energy security studies and the scarcity, abundance and sufficiency literature, this paper problematises the fears behind energy security through a theoretical review that discloses not one but four conceptualisations of scarcity: shortages, absolute scarcity, relative scarcity and scarcification. Subsequently, this paper makes two arguments. First, that goal-oriented definitions of energy security tend to defend the demand and supply of existing energy systems and hence reperform its exclusions, injustices, inequality and exploitations. Second, that in order to break this cycle it is necessary to re-imagine energy security from a goal into a set of security practices that fall within larger practices of scarcification, paying special attention to the unlimited desire behind relative scarcity that drives most of these practices. The paper concludes with a call for energy security scholars to take up the politics of energy security and recognize their role in reproducing and naturalising particular scarcities.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:22:11Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:bbc13be8-6768-4df1-b2fd-f5386d26fced
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:22:11Z
publishDate 2021
publisher Springer
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:bbc13be8-6768-4df1-b2fd-f5386d26fced2022-10-24T12:09:17ZThe scare behind energy security: four conceptualisations of scarcity and a never-ending search for abundanceJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:bbc13be8-6768-4df1-b2fd-f5386d26fcedEnglishSymplectic ElementsSpringer2021Kester, JWhile the number of definitions and metrics of energy security have expanded rapidly (Ang et al. 2015; Sovacool and Mukherjee 2011), surprisingly little attention has been paid to its core concern: the fear of doing without. Shortages and scarcities are the problem to be solved, hardly ever the object of study itself. Inspired by critical energy security studies and the scarcity, abundance and sufficiency literature, this paper problematises the fears behind energy security through a theoretical review that discloses not one but four conceptualisations of scarcity: shortages, absolute scarcity, relative scarcity and scarcification. Subsequently, this paper makes two arguments. First, that goal-oriented definitions of energy security tend to defend the demand and supply of existing energy systems and hence reperform its exclusions, injustices, inequality and exploitations. Second, that in order to break this cycle it is necessary to re-imagine energy security from a goal into a set of security practices that fall within larger practices of scarcification, paying special attention to the unlimited desire behind relative scarcity that drives most of these practices. The paper concludes with a call for energy security scholars to take up the politics of energy security and recognize their role in reproducing and naturalising particular scarcities.
spellingShingle Kester, J
The scare behind energy security: four conceptualisations of scarcity and a never-ending search for abundance
title The scare behind energy security: four conceptualisations of scarcity and a never-ending search for abundance
title_full The scare behind energy security: four conceptualisations of scarcity and a never-ending search for abundance
title_fullStr The scare behind energy security: four conceptualisations of scarcity and a never-ending search for abundance
title_full_unstemmed The scare behind energy security: four conceptualisations of scarcity and a never-ending search for abundance
title_short The scare behind energy security: four conceptualisations of scarcity and a never-ending search for abundance
title_sort scare behind energy security four conceptualisations of scarcity and a never ending search for abundance
work_keys_str_mv AT kesterj thescarebehindenergysecurityfourconceptualisationsofscarcityandaneverendingsearchforabundance
AT kesterj scarebehindenergysecurityfourconceptualisationsofscarcityandaneverendingsearchforabundance