Banks, Emma; Hite, Emily Benton; Schwartz, Steven
doi: 10.3167/ares.2025.160102pmid: N/A
Latin America is deeply entangled with the technologies and infrastructures of low-carbon energy systems, mostly through the mining for transition materials and the installation of renewable energy projects. This review article highlights the history, contemporary panorama, and future of green energy in Latin America. The article also attends to the production of alternative transition models from Indigenous, Afro-descendant, worker, and activist perspectives. We approach these interventions as emergent scholarship that challenges traditional extractive models. We also draw on our fieldwork in Colombia and Costa Rica as examples of energy conflicts and possible energy futures. Through these examples, we call for more visible critical social science scholarship on the green energy transition, especially on efforts that strive to restore justice and well-being in frontline communities.
doi: 10.3167/ares.2025.160103pmid: N/A
Chile is experiencing a successful energy transition, with emissions falling as new solar and wind arrays replace coal-fired power plants. As the mining industry switches to renewable electricity, many in power celebrate this as “sustainable mining,” but not fenceline communities, who feel exhausted by the scale and density of extraction and construction. This article bridges scholarship on the energy transition and the critical minerals boom with a hard look at Chile's unfolding energy transition. It proposes “exhaustion” as a concept that captures the routines that produce cumulative dangers, confusion, moral despair, and manic urgency, which manifest, among other things, in the absence of new development goals. Exhaustion can also bridge local and global scales, shining a light on shared experiences with social and ecological dislocations.
doi: 10.3167/ares.2025.160104pmid: N/A
While electricity and electric grids have been a prominent focus in energy infrastructure scholarship, the role of energy efficiency in managing electricity infrastructure and services remains underexplored. This article argues that energy efficiency, often framed as a technical goal of doing more with less, is deeply entangled with ideologies about the state, energy consumers, and electricity provisioning. Drawing on anthropological and Science and Technology Studies literature, it reviews how electric grids have historically shaped political authority and citizenship and explores how energy efficiency operates as both a technical and cultural project influencing ideas of “good” energy consumption. It calls for greater scholarly attention to the role of energy efficiency in shaping sociomaterial relations within the home. Through a case study of Colorado's Weatherization Assistance Program, the article shows how US energy efficiency retrofits are shaped by neoliberal ideologies and prescriptive notions of the “good energy consumer.”
doi: 10.3167/ares.2025.160105pmid: N/A
The promises and pitfalls of electric vehicles (EVs) are well-documented. EVs can decarbonize the automotive sector and generate “green-collar” jobs, but they rely on extractive, racialized supply chains and perpetuate an inequitable paradigm of vehicular mobility. While anthropologists have not extensively explored EVs, we argue that anthropology offers essential methodological and theoretical insights for confronting this complexity. Specifically, this article draws from anthropological literature to theorize what we call the EV ecosystem: the complex transnational network of corporations, governments, communities, geological formations, and other life forms that connects the multiple phases of EV development and deployment under racial capitalism, namely: raw mineral extraction; mineral processing; manufacturing; adoption/vehicle sales; recycling; and infrastructure development. As a concept, the EV ecosystem aims to inform ethnographic research that corrects for the shortcomings of non-ethnographic literature on EVs, including the compartmentalization of the EV supply chain and an inattention to racial capitalism.
doi: 10.3167/ares.2025.160106pmid: N/A
Dominant discourses assert that the energy transition will be mineral intensive and will therefore require more mining. This article reviews how scholars have analyzed the politics and socio-ecological consequences of the push for transition minerals through concepts such as green extractivism. It advances this literature by examining scholar and activist accounts from Indonesia, the world's largest producer of nickel. Counter to themes of North–South exploitation in the academic literature, Indonesian politicians frame the “downstreaming” of the country's nickel sector as a break from colonial patterns of raw material export. Local critics, however, refute this narrative by documenting concrete mechanisms—new configurations of state control, transnational capital, corruption, and socio-ecological harm—that produce deeply uneven outcomes within Indonesia. These insights underscore the need to examine subnational dynamics of transition mineral extraction while extending scholarship on how green extractivism operates through locally situated narratives, forms of coloniality, and processes of accumulation.
Phillips, Kristin D.; Dean, Erin
doi: 10.3167/ares.2025.160107pmid: N/A
This article explores the intersections between energy, gender, and labor and the multiple and multidirectional transitions involved in the expansion of renewable forms of energy. Drawing on ethnographic research in the country of Tanzania between 2019 and 2024, from the island of Zanzibar, rural Singida, and peri-urban Arusha, it examines how gender organizes social life, space, labor, and the distribution of new energy resources. Rooted in interview data that tracks how people in diverse households understand the relative benefits of household solar and grid electricity, this article demonstrates how electricity expansion initiatives have reinforced gendered and spatial binaries, as well as brought about social change that undermines and unsettles them. It argues that the uncritical prioritization of “productive uses of energy” comes with problematic costs for women and broader goals of energy transition.
Reed, Graeme; de Almeida Cardoso, Ana Carolina; Alook, Angele; Young, Adrienne; Johnson, Lydia R.; Mclay, Kelly
doi: 10.3167/ares.2025.160108pmid: N/A
Commitments to clean energy transitions have accelerated as countries face growing climate-induced impacts. Simultaneously, countries, alongside international organizations, have increasingly recognized Indigenous Peoples’ contributions to energy transitions. Nonetheless, Indigenous Peoples have expressed deep concern about the colonial entanglements of current energy transition discourse and policy. Canada is particularly reckoning with net-zero transition commitments while attempting to balance its constitutional obligations to Indigenous Peoples but struggles to recognize the connections between colonialism and the climate crisis. This article explores this balancing act, by centering the voices of Indigenous climate leaders, shared in Indigenous-led climate gatherings, complemented by an Indigenous policy analysis of key government documents. We argue that to avoid entrenching climate colonialism and coloniality, energy transitions must address the structural legacies of colonization in energy systems, allowing for energy transitions that are clean, just, and decolonial.
Tiwari, Shardul; Neville, Kate J.; Hoicka, Christina E.; Teelucksingh, Cheryl; Besco, Laurel; Huang, Silang; Renowden, Caitlyn; Galloway, Tracey
doi: 10.3167/ares.2025.160109pmid: N/A
Recent efforts to mitigate atmospheric carbon levels have spurred advancements in carbon capture and storage (CCS) and carbon capture, conversion, and utilization (CCCU) technologies, which some consider critical infrastructure for the global energy transition and others view as delaying more ambitious climate policy. This article reviews research on CCS and CCCU—described by some as carbon management technologies (CMT)—asking how scholars and decision-makers evaluate energy technologies for climate change mitigation and consider their potential consequences. Despite a range of critical studies on CCS, current research on CCCU technologies tends to focus on top-down implementation and techno-economic challenges. Further, while extensive work has been published on the technological, economic, and policy dimensions of both CCS and CCCU, scant attention has been paid to the justice concerns resulting from these technologies. This review article draws on approaches from critical social science research on energy transitions, particularly from work focused on the more advanced precursor technology, CCS. We then employ an energy justice lens to scrutinize power dynamics in CMT more broadly, with a specific focus on CCCU technology.
Victor, Erin; Isenhour, Cindy; Yoder, Chyanne
doi: 10.3167/ares.2025.160110pmid: N/A
Under the banner of circularity, eco-modernists celebrate the transformation of trash into renewable energy through incineration, methane capture, anaerobic digestion, gasification, and recycling processes that turn plastics into fuel. Promoted as win-win solutions that reduce waste and produce energy, these technologies raise important questions about the definition of “renewable” and the true costs of converting municipal waste streams to energy. Reviewing recent research in discard studies, this article elucidates the technopolitics of reimagining waste as energy in the United States. Using three case studies, we demonstrate how circular economy logics and “technologies of unknowing” hide the true costs of these technologies, even within US borders. We conclude that efforts to redefine waste detract attention from waste reduction while perpetuating a long history of waste-related injustices.
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