Climate Justice Research Centre, UTS

The Politics and Epistemology of Carbon  Sinks

Roundtable Discussion: Celine Granjou, Andrew Song, Rebecca Pearse, Gopal 
Sarangi and James Goodman

Tuesday 13 August 1230-2.00pm

UTS Building 10, Level 5, Room 580 (10.5.580),
Jones Street, Sydney
Australia

RSVP:  
https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/roundtable-discussion-the-politics-and-epistemology-of-carbon-sinks-tickets-67982628873

With the 2015 Paris Agreement commitment to 'net zero' emissions by 2050, there 
is growing interest in measures to expand carbon sinks that will compensate for 
the continuing global increase in GreenHouse Gas emissions. Forests, coasts and 
soil, among others, are reconceptualised and repositioned in termsof their 
place in the global carbon cycle. New forms of carbon accounting technologies 
are applied to generate carbon credits and offsets. Governments and peoples are 
recruited to new roles in maintaining and expanding sinks. New forms of 
contestation emergeover carbon finance and its impacts on culture, land and 
livelihood. A range of new political agents and agendas are redefined. Some 
political subjects are empowered, and otherwise marginal constituencies are 
reconstituted. This seminar examines these emergingthemes, focusing on soil, 
coasts and forests.

Celine Granjou is a Senior researcher at the French Research Institute for 
Environment and Agriculture (RSTEA) and the Centre for Scientific Research 
(CNRS), both in Grenoble, and also at the InterdisciplinaryLaboratory on 
Science Innovation and Society (LSIS) in Paris.  She has a background in 
Science and Technology Studies, Political Sociology, and Environmental 
Sociology. Her current research interests include: health and environmental 
risks, nature conservationpolicies, biodiversity politics, climate governance, 
anticipation studies, environmental humanities, soil and human/ soil 
relationships. URL: https://sites.google.com/site/celinegranjouwebsite

Andrew Song researches coastal regions, the 'blue economy' and blue carbon at 
UTS with Michael Fabinyi, URL:  https://www.uts.edu.au/staff/michael.fabinyi

Rebecca Pearse has researched forest carbon, in particular the REDD initiative 
in relation to forest rights and carbon offsetting. She is in the Department of 
Political Economy at the University of Sydney where sheresearches inequalities 
and social/environmental change, with a particular interest in how capital 
relates to the carbon cycle, labour, land, gender and social difference; she is 
a key researcher with the Sydney Environment Institute. URL:  
https://sydney.edu.au/arts/ssps/staff/profiles/rebecca.pearse.php

Gopal Sarangi is an energy policy researcher at The Energy and Resources 
Institute, (TERI University), in New Delhi. His primary domain of research 
covers energy market and regulation, intersection of energy technologies, fuels 
and resources with public policies, social systems and processes, energy and 
climate policy, governance and institutional analysis ofenergy transition 
questions and impact assessment of energy and environmental interventions. He 
has a PhD on ‘Sustainability Assessment of India Electricity Sector’, comparing 
regional energy policies across India. URL:  
https://www.terisas.ac.in/faculty.php?id=34

James Goodman is Director at the Climate Justice Research Centre. URL;  
https://www.uts.edu.au/research-and-teaching/our-research/climate-justice-research-centre

UTS CRICOS Provider Code: 00099F DISCLAIMER: This email message and any 
accompanying attachments may contain confidential information. If you are not 
the intended recipient, do not read, use, disseminate, distribute or copy this 
message or attachments. If you have received this message in error, please 
notify the sender immediately and delete this message. Any views expressed in 
this message are those of the individual sender, except where the sender 
expressly, and with authority, states them to be the views of the University of 
Technology Sydney. Before opening any attachments, please check them for 
viruses and defects. Think. Green. Do. Please consider the environment before 
printing this email.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/ME2PR01MB4946ED2E04AB2CD0DBBA5D38DBD50%40ME2PR01MB4946.ausprd01.prod.outlook.com.

Reply via email to