The Hidden Face of the Green Transition: Energy Colonialism and Environmental Necropolitics in the Global South
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58210/rie3775Keywords:
Socio-environmental justice, Strategic minerals, Territorial dispossession, E, Environmental racism, Ecological distribution conflictsAbstract
The expansion of renewable infrastructures and critical mineral mining in Latin America has been framed as a technical solution to the climate crisis. This article critically examines how these processes reproduce core-periphery asymmetries and operate as forms of environmental necropolitics by concentrating ecological risks on racialized territories. An integrative review was conducted through systematic searches in SciELO, Scopus, Web of Science and PubMed, using descriptors in English, Spanish and Portuguese, applying rigorous eligibility criteria and critical content analysis. Findings reveal recurrent patterns of territorial dispossession, consolidation of sacrifice zones and corporate discursive strategies in lithium mining and large-scale wind and solar projects. The study concludes that global decarbonization may reinforce structural dependencies unless accompanied by energy justice, territorial sovereignty and recognition of Southern epistemologies.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Paulo Roberto Ramos, Maria Miryam da Silva Alves, Rodrigo Almeida Ferreira, Raimundo Ribeiro Galvão Filho, Arlete Colaço de Azevêdo, Italo Alan Barbosa Bispo, Herácliton Neves Araújo, Tatiana da Silva Gomes, João Deryson Figueiredo Sampaio, Ismael Vanio Agostinho Santana, Bruno Nunes Nogueira, Pedro Paulo da Cunha

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