Unconventional futures: anticipation, materiality, and the market in oil shale development

<p>This thesis offers a political geography of unconventional energy development through a study of a particular fossil fuel resource called oil shale. Having long occupied a critical place in the politics and economy of certain states, most notably in Estonia, oil shale is now widely known as...

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Main Author: Kama, K
Other Authors: Barry, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
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author Kama, K
author2 Barry, A
author_facet Barry, A
Kama, K
author_sort Kama, K
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description <p>This thesis offers a political geography of unconventional energy development through a study of a particular fossil fuel resource called oil shale. Having long occupied a critical place in the politics and economy of certain states, most notably in Estonia, oil shale is now widely known as an ‘unconventional’ resource that is yet to become technically possible, commercially viable and socially acceptable to exploit. Following the movement through which oil shale becomes both unconventional and conventional, the thesis traces the resource through a series of geo-scientific, economic and political interventions. This study is based on analysis of technical literature and policy documents along with ethnographic fieldwork, interviews, and site visits conducted in Estonia, Colorado, Utah, Jordan, London and Brussels. Drawing together relational accounts of natural resources in political ecology and economic geography with insights from Science and Technology Studies, this project both contributes to critical research on the carbon economy and to recent debates on the concepts of materiality, anticipation, and marketization in social sciences. The thesis proposes a relational conceptualization of resource materiality, situating oil shale in multiple and conflicting forms which derive from geographically disparate practices in both resource assessment and technological development. The future of oil shale exploitation is not pre-determined by the process of global resource decline, nor is it precluded by international demands to move towards lower-carbon futures. Rather, it is determined through the conjunction of different future-oriented economic and political calculations that are entangled with resource materials and associated technological systems. Developing a non-essentialist account of markets as socio-technically distributed arrangements, the thesis argues that these rival calculations influence the design of market rules for both energy and emissions trading. The thesis concludes that what counts as ‘unconventional’ is not given, but continues to be both created and contested at the same time as it is ‘conventionalized’.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:c08589c9-d82a-4c6e-926e-36202bf2060a2022-03-27T05:55:00ZUnconventional futures: anticipation, materiality, and the market in oil shale developmentThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:c08589c9-d82a-4c6e-926e-36202bf2060aMaterial anthropologyPolitical economy of markets and statesHistory of technologyEU LawGeographyTechnologies of politics and ecologyEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2013Kama, KBarry, A<p>This thesis offers a political geography of unconventional energy development through a study of a particular fossil fuel resource called oil shale. Having long occupied a critical place in the politics and economy of certain states, most notably in Estonia, oil shale is now widely known as an ‘unconventional’ resource that is yet to become technically possible, commercially viable and socially acceptable to exploit. Following the movement through which oil shale becomes both unconventional and conventional, the thesis traces the resource through a series of geo-scientific, economic and political interventions. This study is based on analysis of technical literature and policy documents along with ethnographic fieldwork, interviews, and site visits conducted in Estonia, Colorado, Utah, Jordan, London and Brussels. Drawing together relational accounts of natural resources in political ecology and economic geography with insights from Science and Technology Studies, this project both contributes to critical research on the carbon economy and to recent debates on the concepts of materiality, anticipation, and marketization in social sciences. The thesis proposes a relational conceptualization of resource materiality, situating oil shale in multiple and conflicting forms which derive from geographically disparate practices in both resource assessment and technological development. The future of oil shale exploitation is not pre-determined by the process of global resource decline, nor is it precluded by international demands to move towards lower-carbon futures. Rather, it is determined through the conjunction of different future-oriented economic and political calculations that are entangled with resource materials and associated technological systems. Developing a non-essentialist account of markets as socio-technically distributed arrangements, the thesis argues that these rival calculations influence the design of market rules for both energy and emissions trading. The thesis concludes that what counts as ‘unconventional’ is not given, but continues to be both created and contested at the same time as it is ‘conventionalized’.</p>
spellingShingle Material anthropology
Political economy of markets and states
History of technology
EU Law
Geography
Technologies of politics and ecology
Kama, K
Unconventional futures: anticipation, materiality, and the market in oil shale development
title Unconventional futures: anticipation, materiality, and the market in oil shale development
title_full Unconventional futures: anticipation, materiality, and the market in oil shale development
title_fullStr Unconventional futures: anticipation, materiality, and the market in oil shale development
title_full_unstemmed Unconventional futures: anticipation, materiality, and the market in oil shale development
title_short Unconventional futures: anticipation, materiality, and the market in oil shale development
title_sort unconventional futures anticipation materiality and the market in oil shale development
topic Material anthropology
Political economy of markets and states
History of technology
EU Law
Geography
Technologies of politics and ecology
work_keys_str_mv AT kamak unconventionalfuturesanticipationmaterialityandthemarketinoilshaledevelopment