Despite increasing calls for the development of a circular economy, extractive industries are gaining renewed relevance in Europe. The European Commission’s plan to expand domestic sourcing of lithium to scale up the production and use of electric vehicles has been met with social resistance from affected communities who mobilize to protect their livelihoods and nature. This article examines the negotiations around a proposed lithium mine in the Barroso region in northern Portugal.
In a time where effective solutions to tackle the impacts of climate change are urgently needed, lithium extraction is understood by many as a pivotal opportunity to produce vehicle batteries and enable the phase-out of fossil fuel vehicles. In this line, European policymakers have promoted a new era of “green mining”, where
both the use of end products and technologies for extraction are deemed sustainable. Given the European Commission’s pledge to enable a just transition that commits to leaving no one behind on the way toward a green economy, the expectations and fears of Europeans directly affected by new extractive projects are of significant importance.
This article takes a political ecology approach that combines the concepts of place and anticipation to examine negotiations around a proposed lithium mine in the Barroso region in northern Portugal. Drawing on 27 qualitative semi-structured interviews and ethnographic research in August 2021, the authors explore how local residents engage in the politics of anticipation around the mine.
The study has two main findings:
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