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  • 1
    UID:
    b3kat_BV049408420
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (296 Seiten)
    Edition: 1st ed
    ISBN: 9780128240755
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources , Front Cover -- PUBLIC RESPONSES TO FOSSIL FUEL EXPORT -- PUBLIC RESPONSES TO FOSSIL FUEL EXPORT: Exporting Energy and Emissions in a Time of Transition -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Contributors -- Acknowledgments -- I - Introduction -- 1 - An introduction to the social dimensions of fossil fuel export in an era of energy transition -- Fossil fuel export: status and trends -- What do we already know? -- Boomtowns, risk perceptions, and overadaptation -- Locally unwanted land uses and the environmental justice movement -- Renewables and fracking -- Summary -- Organization of the book -- Some concluding thoughts -- References -- II - The new landscape of fossil fuel technology, supply, and policy -- 2 - The new global energy order: shifting players, policies, and power dynamics -- Introduction: the emergence of a new energy order -- Global energy system -- COVID-19 energy impacts -- Between old and new -- Clean energy transition -- Winners and losers of the energy transition -- Conclusion -- References -- 3 - Fossil fuel export as a climate policy problem -- Why fossil fuel export is often ignored in climate policy -- The rationale for addressing fossil fuel export as a component of climate policymaking -- How public response has helped bridge the issues of climate change and fossil fuel export -- References -- III - Public opinion on export -- 4 - The evolution of US public attitudes toward natural gas export: a pooled cross-sectional analysis of time serie ... -- Background -- Natural gas: bridge fuel or a bridge too far? -- Research questions -- Materials and methods -- Data -- Measures -- Analysis -- Findings -- Patterns in agreement across time -- Modeling agreement with natural gas export -- Discussion -- References -- 5 - Drivers of US regulatory preferences for natural gas export -- Introduction -- Literature review -- Age , Gender -- Political ideology -- Awareness -- Benefit and risk perception -- Data and methods -- Results -- Discussion and policy implications -- References -- 6 - Energy and export transitions: from oil exports to renewable energy goals in Aotearoa New Zealand -- Island transitions -- Critical time and place methodologies -- Debating offshore exploration and an onshore terminal -- Disputing employment promotions and lowered petrol prices -- Transitioning to green jobs and green technology exports -- Conclusions -- References -- 7 - Trends in Norwegian views on oil and gas export -- Background-Norway's role as an oil and gas exporter -- Data and methods -- Policy analysis -- Public opinion studies -- Main findings from policy analysis -- Results from public opinion studies -- Public opinion on drilling in new areas -- Future size of the oil and gas industry -- Worry about climate change -- Discussion -- References -- 8 - A "thin green line" of resistance? Assessing public views on oil, natural gas, and coal export in the Pacific N ... -- Introduction -- Fossil fuel production, export, and policy in the Pacific Northwest -- Public opinion on fossil fuels: how does it relate to export? -- Methods: survey sampling and measurement -- Results -- Discussion, implications, and future research -- References -- IV - Community response to export projects -- 9 - Global discourses, national priorities, and community experiences of participation in the energy infrastructure ... -- Introduction -- Shifting spatialities of Russia's oil and gas projects -- Rising community concerns -- Evolving community responses -- Growing demands for meaningful participation -- Strategies of exclusion and nonparticipation -- Discursive strategies -- Market mechanisms -- Legal and bureaucratic strategies -- Strategies of uncertainty -- Discussion and conclusion -- References , 10 - Indigenous ambivalence? It's not about the pipeline ...: Indigenous responses to fossil fuel export projects in ... -- Introduction -- Settler colonialism and the ongoing struggles for Indigenous self-determination -- The Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion project -- Methods -- Case studies: contextualizing ambivalence -- Rights and governance -- Economy and capacity -- Decision-making and project -- Discussion and conclusions -- References -- 11 - The primacy of place: a community's response to a proposed liquefied natural gas export facility∗ -- Introduction -- Context -- Methods -- Findings -- "It was about the fish, really -- salmon, and the communities that relied on them." (N-13)33Interviews were coded based on lo ... -- "You're asking us to take all of the risks-which seem rather significant-and get none of the rewards?" (N-12) -- "[G]overnments do make bad decisions, whether they intend to or not, and corporations do not have the communities' best int ... -- Discussion and conclusions -- References -- 12 - Impact geographies of gas terminal development in the northern Australian context: insights from Gladstone and ... -- Introduction -- LNG development in Australia -- Purpose of this chapter -- Methods -- Gas terminal development in Australia: a tale of two cities -- Gladstone, Queensland -- Darwin, Northern Territory -- Concluding reflections -- References -- 13 - Community risk or resilience? Perceptions and responses to oil train traffic in four US rail communities -- Introduction -- Perceptions of energy transportation and exports via rail -- Methods and analysis -- Survey dissemination -- Study communities -- Analysis -- Risk perceptions on a range of potential OBR impacts -- Community capacity and vulnerability perceptions -- Overall support and opposition -- Findings -- Risk perceptions -- Community capacities and vulnerabilities , Support, opposition, and uncertainty -- Discussion: rural and urban risks, vulnerabilities, and opposition -- Conclusion -- References -- 14 - Leave it in the ground, or send it abroad? Assessing themes in community response to coal export proposals usi ... -- Introduction -- Background and framework -- Energy policy and fossil fuel export in Western Washington State -- "Scaled-up" social movement activities: from locally unwanted land uses to broader contention -- Data and methods -- Description of the cases: Gateway Pacific Terminal (GPT) and Millennium Bulk Terminals (MBT) -- Data acquisition and cleaning -- Topic modeling using LDA -- Findings -- How do the two cases differ in terms of the themes that were most prominent? -- How did local versus "scaled-up" concerns feature in the GPT and MBT debates? -- Conclusion: implications for fossil fuel export in the Pacific Northwest -- References -- V - The future of fossil fuel export in an era of energy transition -- 15 - Social dimensions of fossil fuel export: summary of learnings and implications for research and practice -- Climate is an increasing concern in energy export debates -- Export routes present many opportunities for opposition -- Changing attitudes about natural gas likely to impact export -- Some familiar patterns persist -- Implications (and a few limitations) for research and practice -- Closing words -- References -- Further reading -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- W -- Y -- Back Cover
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Boudet, Hilary Public Responses to Fossil Fuel Export San Diego : Elsevier,c2022 ISBN 9780128240465
    Language: English
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