Abstract

Abstract This essay reviews three recent books on the changing landscape of global energy politics in the era of climate change. Key questions that the authors investigate include: how will the renewable energy transition reshape the global balance of power? How will political-economic interdependencies and geopolitical alignments shift? Will contemporary petro-states adapt or collapse? And what new patterns of peace and conflict may emerge in a decarbonized world order? The authors provide different perspectives on the likely speed of the energy transition and its geopolitical implications. However, they occlude deeper questions about the depth of the transformations needed to prevent climate catastrophe—particularly in the nature of capitalism and military power—and the potential for more radical perspectives on energy futures. In contrast, I will argue that we should advance a critical research agenda on the global energy transition that accounts for the possibility of more far-reaching transformations in the political-economic, military, and ideological bases of world politics and highlights diverse movements fighting for their realization. These possible transformations include (1) transitions to post-growth political economies; (2) a radical shrinkage of emissions-intensive military–industrial complexes; and (3) decolonizing ideologies of “progress.” If struggles for alternative energy futures beyond the hegemony of economic growth and Western-style modernization are at the forefront of radical politics today, then these struggles deserve greater attention from critical IR scholars.

Highlights

  • Energy flows are the foundation of life, global capitalism, and world order, yet energy remains a relatively neglected subject in the field of International Relations (IR)

  • I will argue that we should advance a critical research agenda on the global energy transition that accounts for the possibility of more far-reaching transformations in the political-economic, military, and ideological bases of world politics and highlights diverse climate justice movements fighting for their realization

  • The books reviewed above share a common blind spot, which Matthew Paterson suggests is common among IR scholars more generally: that they ignore or downplay “the depth of the social transformation entailed in addressing climate change adequately,” as well as “the catastrophic costs of failing to do so” (Paterson, 2020, pp. 2)

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Summary

Abstract Abstract

This essay reviews three recent books on the changing landscape of global energy politics in the era of climate change. I will argue that we should advance a critical research agenda on the global energy transition that accounts for the possibility of more farreaching transformations in the political-economic, military, and ideological bases of world politics and highlights diverse movements fighting for their realization. These possible transformations include (1) transitions to post-growth political economies; (2) a radical shrinkage of emissions-intensive military–industrial complexes; and (3) decolonizing ideologies of “progress.” If struggles for alternative energy futures beyond the hegemony of economic growth and Western-style modernization are at the forefront of radical politics today, these struggles deserve greater attention from critical IR scholars.

Introduction
The Emerging Geopolitics of Renewable Energy
The Continuing Geopolitics of Oil and Gas Amidst the Energy Transition
Toward a Critical IR Research Agenda on the Global Energy Transition
Conclusion
Findings
Author Biography
Full Text
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