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Hauptseite Ausgaben 16 'Green' Extractivism and its Disc Electric Vehicle Paradise? Norway has the world-class ambition to make transport more sustainable and climate friendly.
Its electric vehicle EV rollout is celebrated by and aspirational for other countries, manifesting the imaginary of technological solutions for sustainable mobility. This chapter undertakes a critically constructive analysis of the value chains of this rollout, tracing the production, usage and discard of EVs.
We map relevant externalities associated with, for example, the mining of raw materials and with modes of digitalisation that run counter to circular economy principles. The uneven distribution of benefits and burdens is increasingly being criticised as green extractivism for an imperial mode of living. By paying attention to site-specific struggles over resources, our mapping demonstrates that practices of legitimation have yet to be welded with holistic accountability.
Thus far, the rollout remains a largely middle- and upper-class phenomenon Fevang et al. Notably, this is beginning to change, with the procurement of electric buses Thorne et al. The expansion of EVs has been criticised for perpetuating over consumption and overshadowing efforts to shift away from automobility and towards walking, cycling and public transportation Henderson, ; Remme, Sareen and Haarstad , Accounting for the diverse spatial—temporal implications of the rollout, however, requires holistic analysis of its value chain.