Disputation: Gz. MeeNilankco Theiventhran

Master of Political Science Gz. MeeNilankco Theiventhran will be defending his dissertation for the degree of PhD (philosophiae doctor) at the Department of Sociology and Human Geography.

Energy Transition in Post-War Sri Lanka: Policy pathways, geopolitical dynamics and the question of equity

Bildet kan inneholde: panne, øyenbryn, kjole skjorte, halsbånd, hals.

MeeNilankco Theiventhran

Time and place for trial lecture:

Time: August 29th 2023 kl. 09.15

Place: Auditorium 2, Sophus Bugges Building

Trial lecture: Energy justice, post-war justice: lessons from the Global South

 

Adjudication Committee:

  • Professor Camilla Orjuela, School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg
  • Professor Håvard Haarstad, Centre for Climate and Energy Transformation, University of Bergen
  • Professor Bjørnar Sæther, Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo


Chair of Defence:

  • Professor Terje Wessel, Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo

Supervisors:

  • Professor Kristian Stokke, Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo
  • Former Researcher Chris Butters, Centre for Development and the Environment, University of Oslo

Project Leader:

Professor Dhayalan Velauthapillai, Head - ANCEHA Research Group, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences

 

In his doctoral dissertation Gz. MeeNilankco Theiventhran examines post-war societies’ prospects of achieving energy transition socially, equitably and positively and explores potential pathways and associated challenges. Focusing on Sri Lanka, Theiventhran explores the motives, strategies, and conditions accompanying energy transitions in a post-war context. He challenges the conventional wisdom on renewables and points out that clean and green are not always desirable.

The dissertation argues that the starting point for any energy transition, especially in a post-war environment, should be the understanding that energy injustice is produced historically, geographically and materially. In other words, energy inequity, injustice, and vulnerability are far more complex than matters of technology, prices and income and involve structural and socio-cultural conditions that have evolved and will continue to do so, positively or negatively, over time and space.

In the global South, energy transition initiatives have been in an investor-led, donor-shaped policy environment where financing and technological choices are largely determined by corporate and foreign players and state elites, where the interests of the poorest groups are easily neglected. The interdependencies established by global power infrastructure and the formation of new patterns in international trade relating to renewable energy have created new inequities impacting developing countries. Theiventhran argues that in order to achieve just and sustainable energy transitions in the Global South, it is necessary to counter or at least balance the neoliberal capitalistic mode of technological-financial fixes typically promoted by bilateral and multilateral agencies as well as private sector investors.

This dissertation offers an alternative perspective: Even though energy transitions are at the forefront of combating climate change, it is crucial to recognise that clean and green may only sometimes be very clean or very green.

Scientific abstract (pdf)

For more information:

Contact Katalin Varga

Publisert 25. juli 2023 09:01 - Sist endret 23. aug. 2023 14:54