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hal.structure.identifierHistoire des technosciences en société [HT2S]
dc.contributor.authorBRIDAY, Régis
hal.structure.identifierCentre Émile Durkheim [CED]
dc.contributor.authorCHAILLEUX, Sébastien
hal.structure.identifierTransitions Energétiques et Environnementales [TREE]
dc.contributor.authorARNAULD DE SARTRE, Xavier
dc.date.issued2024-08
dc.identifier.issn2425-6870
dc.description.abstractEnThis article contributes to the history of both climate policies and industrial and energy sectors (IESs) dynamics in France, through the analysis of discourses and practices around a climate technology: CCUS (carbon capture, utilisation, and storage). We show that while CCUS has been continuously promoted as a decarbonisation technology in speeches, the main goal of its promoters in practice has instead been research and R&D cooperation, plus funding. With rare exceptions, CCUS has remained politically disconnected from the issues of energy independence and deindustrialisation. This brings into question the French technocratic and political elites’ commitment to undertaking these two missions. Of course, some public players stress that they do not want to confuse the debate over CCUS, or make it more controversial, since reindustrialisation tends to generate new domestic CO2 emissions. Nonetheless, other factors can explain the very marginal space made for energy independence and deindustrialisation in the CCUS discourses. Firstly, many members of the political, expertise, and industrial elites demonstrate a certain self-satisfaction over the level of decarbonisation and energy independence, mainly related to France’s unique development of nuclear power. Secondly, the issue of reindustrialisation has always been rather low on the French governmental agenda. Besides this, the practices of CCUS promoters raise a democratic problem. Firstly, most public planners still think of the question of decarbonisation in a way that is rather disconnected from other issues of public action. Secondly, decisions about IESs and climate are still often made in a classic State-centred technocratic problem-management style, and/or are kept in a confined technical sphere. By studying the case of CCUS, this article both contributes to the complex history of French IESs in the time of climate politics, and opens up the present debates over decarbonisation and IESs to greater complexity.
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherSpringer
dc.subject.enIndustrial and energy sectors (IESs)
dc.subject.enDecarbonisation
dc.subject.enReindustrialisation
dc.subject.enEnergy independence
dc.subject.enR&amp
dc.subject.enD cooperation
dc.subject.enCarbon capture
dc.subject.enutilisation and storage (CCUS)
dc.subject.enDiscourses
dc.subject.enPractices
dc.subject.enExperts
dc.subject.enFrance
dc.title.enThe complex challenges and opportunities of the industrial and energy sectors (IESs) in the time of climate politics: carbon capture, utilisation, and storage (CCUS) in France as a case study
dc.typeArticle de revue
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/s41130-024-00208-x
dc.subject.halSciences de l'Homme et Société
bordeaux.journalReview of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Studies
bordeaux.page151-177
bordeaux.volume105
bordeaux.issue1
bordeaux.peerReviewedoui
hal.identifierhalshs-04569655
hal.version1
hal.popularnon
hal.audienceInternationale
hal.origin.linkhttps://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr//halshs-04569655v1
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