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Energy-security conceptions in the Arctic region

W. Lindberg, Helena LU (2015)
Nordic Environmental Social Science Conference
Abstract
Current climate change is opening up the Arctic region, not only in physical terms, as ice melts and former solid frozen ocean becomes penetrable for transport and resource extraction, but also in terms of opening up to global concerns as a contested political space: geopolitical issues that used to define the Arctic has become more complicated. It is challenging for the current cooperation in the Arctic that the region is portrayed to the world as somewhat a global common, of which many other actors outside the region have important stakes, in particular concerning so-called energy-security. This paper aims at mapping different understandings of energy-security within the Arctic region. Taking on a sustainability approach to the... (More)
Current climate change is opening up the Arctic region, not only in physical terms, as ice melts and former solid frozen ocean becomes penetrable for transport and resource extraction, but also in terms of opening up to global concerns as a contested political space: geopolitical issues that used to define the Arctic has become more complicated. It is challenging for the current cooperation in the Arctic that the region is portrayed to the world as somewhat a global common, of which many other actors outside the region have important stakes, in particular concerning so-called energy-security. This paper aims at mapping different understandings of energy-security within the Arctic region. Taking on a sustainability approach to the conceptualisation of energy-security, the paper first problematizes the concept of security coupled with energy, and asks: can sustainability and energy-security be compatible concepts? If energy-security is regarded to concern safety, certainty, and by implication, the maintenance of status quo where securitization of energy-security can legitimize unsustainable and short-term resource ambitions, this is problematic for the long-term sustainability of communities in the Arctic region. It is discussed how the notion of energy-security can encourage an opportunistic adaptation to climate change, where the Arctic region is regarded as an area of unlimited resources that need to be extracted. Lastly, this paper argues that a more human understanding of security is needed, one that do not inhibit the possibilities for people living in the Arctic region to achieve an arguably more crucial adaptation to climate change. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
unpublished
subject
pages
1 pages
conference name
<br/>Nordic Environmental Social Science Conference
conference location
Trondheim, Norway
conference dates
2015-06-09 - 2015-06-11
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
9d7f66c2-73d6-44f6-b747-accf1c316d49
date added to LUP
2019-03-11 14:35:12
date last changed
2019-03-12 14:12:31
@misc{9d7f66c2-73d6-44f6-b747-accf1c316d49,
  abstract     = {{Current climate change is opening up the Arctic region, not only in physical terms, as ice melts and former solid frozen ocean becomes penetrable for transport and resource extraction, but also in terms of opening up to global concerns as a contested political space: geopolitical issues that used to define the Arctic has become more complicated. It is challenging for the current cooperation in the Arctic that the region is portrayed to the world as somewhat a global common, of which many other actors outside the region have important stakes, in particular concerning so-called energy-security. This paper aims at mapping different understandings of energy-security within the Arctic region. Taking on a sustainability approach to the conceptualisation of energy-security, the paper first problematizes the concept of security coupled with energy, and asks: can sustainability and energy-security be compatible concepts? If energy-security is regarded to concern safety, certainty, and by implication, the maintenance of status quo where securitization of energy-security can legitimize unsustainable and short-term resource ambitions, this is problematic for the long-term sustainability of communities in the Arctic region. It is discussed how the notion of energy-security can encourage an opportunistic adaptation to climate change, where the Arctic region is regarded as an area of unlimited resources that need to be extracted. Lastly, this paper argues that a more human understanding of security is needed, one that do not inhibit the possibilities for people living in the Arctic region to achieve an arguably more crucial adaptation to climate change.}},
  author       = {{W. Lindberg, Helena}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{06}},
  title        = {{Energy-security conceptions in the Arctic region}},
  year         = {{2015}},
}