Post-Petroleum Security in a Changing Arctic: Narratives and Trajectories Towards Viable Futures
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/14882Date
2018-10-04Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
In this paper we explore how post-petroleum security is continually shaped by both the micropolitical practices of everyday life as well as the changing geopolitics of energy landscapes. We focus
in particular on the two-decade long struggle over access to hydrocarbon deposits outside the
Lofoten, Vesterålen and Senja archipelago groups (LoVeSe), and show how local security perspectives permeate both national and international debates concerning the future of oil and the global
climate challenge. These developments, we argue, are taking place in a paradoxical conjunction
with Norwegian political establishment who along with the oil and gas industry insist on continued
petroleum dependency as the only viable future. We further investigate how particular controlling
measures have determined past, present and future narratives, and assess how alternative ideas
that include multiple possible trajectories have found their way into national and global debates
despite these efforts. The argument permeating this paper states that while oil remains a security
concern to both proponents and opponents to oil development in the Arctic, the extent to which
this situation is seen as a threat or a security provider varies greatly.
Description
Source at https://doi.org/10.23865/arctic.v9.1251.