4.7 Article

The gasoline of the future: points of continuity, energy materiality, and corporate marketing of electric vehicles among automakers and utilities

Journal

ENERGY RESEARCH & SOCIAL SCIENCE
Volume 83, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.erss.2021.102349

Keywords

Political ecology; Energy; Electric vehicles; Materiality

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Electric vehicles are seen as crucial in the U.S. shift towards a green economy fueled by renewable energy, but research has shown negative impacts of EV resource extraction. This paper introduces the concept of points of continuity, where aspects of gasoline vehicle user experience are mimicked to increase EV adoption, highlighting the political power involved in maintaining existing patterns of automobile production and consumption within green capitalism.
Electric vehicles (EVs) are key to U.S. plans to transition to a green economy that is powered by renewable energy rather than fossil fuels. There has been extensive research documenting the adverse socio-ecological impacts of resource extraction for EVs, including water shortages driven by lithium mining on Indigenous lands in South America and child labor in cobalt mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. However, little research has attended to the ways that automakers and utility companies shape the adoption of EVs through the use of corporate narratives and strategies. In this paper, we introduce the concept of points of continuity, whereby specific aspects of the gasoline vehicle user experience are mimicked by the EV industry to increase adoption of EVs. This desire to adopt behavioral similarities between gasoline and electric vehicles allows for existing patterns of automobile production and consumption to be maintained. However, in order to establish points of continuity, EV industry actors must navigate material constraints imposed by the physical properties of electric power. Through this case study, we demonstrate that the production of points of continuity is an exercise of political power that may maintain the environmental violence of green capitalism.

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