No dia 21 de maio de 2024, Hiroyuki Tsuji, do Departamento de Geografia Humana e Ordenamento do Território da Universidade de Utrecht, dará uma palestra intitulada "Examining the new coal governance amid the energy transition: the rise of Indian interests in Mozambican coal".
O evento é co-organizado pelas linhas temáticas 2 – Global Governance e 4 – Regenerative Territories for Carbon Neutrality, do SocioDigital Lab, e pelos mestrados em Estudos de Desenvolvimento (Escola de Ciências Sociais e Humanas) e em Ação Humanitária (Escola de Sociologia e Políticas Públicas) do Iscte. Com entrada livre, a palestra (em inglês) terá lugar às 15h00 no Edifício 4 do Iscte, sala A202 (limitado à lotação da sala).
Resumo
Despite world nations’ pledges to materialize the energy transition, many southern countries have not yet discarded the option of continuing to rely on coal for their development. This situation has strengthened the south-south coal flow and alliances and has created new ways of coal governance, which deserves more scholarly attention. This trend is observed in Tete province, the center of coal mining in Mozambique. Over the past decade, multinational mining companies have divested from Tete, partly due to the energy transition. Today, the major coal projects are owned by Indian capital, with the aim of fueling their economic growth. The Mozambican government is also determined to rely on coal to further develop the regional and national economy. Scholars have observed that the coal governance, initially led by multinationals, exacerbated socioeconomic inequality among the population. Amid the consolidation of Indian-Mozambican coal alliances, there is an urgent need to understand how the new coal governance is negotiated, justified, and implemented. Drawing on ethnographic research, this paper examines how the Indian mining companies and the Mozambican state co-create a specific form of coal governance in Tete and along the coal transport corridors.
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