4.7 Article

Whose energy sovereignty? Competing imaginaries of Mexico's energy future

Journal

ENERGY RESEARCH & SOCIAL SCIENCE
Volume 96, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.erss.2022.102919

Keywords

Sociotechnical imaginaries; Energy sovereignty; Energy futures; Neo-extractivism; Energy transitions

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Mexico started its path towards renewable energy in 2013 with ambitious targets for clean energy and carbon emissions. However, the efforts were stalled and even reversed after President López Obrador was elected in 2018. In this time of uncertainty, different energy futures are being debated. Through interviews and analysis, the central role of energy sovereignty and different imaginaries in shaping these futures is discussed. The politicization of energy may provide an opportunity for broader notions of energy sovereignty to be included in future imaginaries.
Mexico started down a path toward renewable energy in 2013 when the central government set ambitious targets for clean energy and carbon emissions through long-term electricity auctions and clean energy licenses. In 2018, these efforts came to a drastic halt when President L acute accent opez Obrador was elected. Since then, efforts to transition to renewable have been stalled, and even reversed to some extent. At this moment of fundamental political, societal, and technical uncertainty, different futures are being debated. On the basis of 24 narrative interviews conducted with experts in the Mexican energy sector and extensive document analysis, we discuss how energy futures are imagined in different assemblages of institutions, technologies, and political power. Notions of energy sovereignty take central stage in discourses employed by actors seeking to materialize their imaginaries. Using the sociotechnical imaginaries framework, we identify and discuss both the dominant imaginaries and three counterimaginaries, as well as their expression within notions of energy sovereignty. We conclude that this politicization may present an opportunity to include broader notions of energy sovereignty in imaginaries of energy futures.

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