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"Blood on the floor": The nickel commodity frontier and inter-capitalist competition under green extractivism

Barbesgaard, Mads LU and Whitmore, Andy (2024) In Journal of Political Ecology
Abstract
Major companies in the mining industry are strategizing to benefit from the expected rise in demand for energy
"transition minerals" that underpin current technologies of decarbonization (such as batteries and wind turbines).
This article elucidates their current strategies of accumulation through the case of BHP, the world's largest mining
company. We draw on political ecology and commodity frontier theory in order to grapple with inter-capitalist
competition under the current moment of green extractivism by examining firm and state practices in the nickel
commodity frontier. Empirically, we examine the changing role that nickel has played in BHP's asset portfolio
during the past decade where it has attempted to... (More)
Major companies in the mining industry are strategizing to benefit from the expected rise in demand for energy
"transition minerals" that underpin current technologies of decarbonization (such as batteries and wind turbines).
This article elucidates their current strategies of accumulation through the case of BHP, the world's largest mining
company. We draw on political ecology and commodity frontier theory in order to grapple with inter-capitalist
competition under the current moment of green extractivism by examining firm and state practices in the nickel
commodity frontier. Empirically, we examine the changing role that nickel has played in BHP's asset portfolio
during the past decade where it has attempted to significantly accumulate from the expansion of the nickel
commodity frontier. Yet, despite this centering of the expansion of the nickel commodity frontier for its particular
strategy of accumulation under green extractivism, it has so far been unsuccessful. Given this potential for failure
of company practices in commodity frontiers, we argue that green extractivism should not always and everywhere
be seen as a story foretold. (Less)
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Contribution to journal
publication status
published
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Journal of Political Ecology
publisher
University of Arizona
ISSN
1073-0451
DOI
10.2458/jpe.5458
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
bfab10da-4351-435f-9a4a-fe034b505a84
date added to LUP
2024-06-13 09:51:03
date last changed
2024-06-14 10:39:29
@article{bfab10da-4351-435f-9a4a-fe034b505a84,
  abstract     = {{Major companies in the mining industry are strategizing to benefit from the expected rise in demand for energy<br/>"transition minerals" that underpin current technologies of decarbonization (such as batteries and wind turbines).<br/>This article elucidates their current strategies of accumulation through the case of BHP, the world's largest mining<br/>company. We draw on political ecology and commodity frontier theory in order to grapple with inter-capitalist<br/>competition under the current moment of green extractivism by examining firm and state practices in the nickel<br/>commodity frontier. Empirically, we examine the changing role that nickel has played in BHP's asset portfolio<br/>during the past decade where it has attempted to significantly accumulate from the expansion of the nickel<br/>commodity frontier. Yet, despite this centering of the expansion of the nickel commodity frontier for its particular<br/>strategy of accumulation under green extractivism, it has so far been unsuccessful. Given this potential for failure<br/>of company practices in commodity frontiers, we argue that green extractivism should not always and everywhere<br/>be seen as a story foretold.}},
  author       = {{Barbesgaard, Mads and Whitmore, Andy}},
  issn         = {{1073-0451}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{University of Arizona}},
  series       = {{Journal of Political Ecology}},
  title        = {{"Blood on the floor": The nickel commodity frontier and inter-capitalist competition under green extractivism}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/jpe.5458}},
  doi          = {{10.2458/jpe.5458}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}